Why? I use 1.2 with my Windows 7 64 bit and I watch a lot of mkv with it. Especially since it can play 10bits H264. There were big changes in mkv parser for 1.2 so once again if you still experiences crashes with it you should tell us what files failed then temporarily switch to ffmpeg. So yes the current parser isn't perfect but it's definitely getting better so please give it a try and help us improving it with bug reports.VLC 1.2 in my opinion works better in an XP Enviroment, and cannot work properly in Windows 7 64 bit, which is where I now use VLC.
No. If you remove libmkv_plugin.dll, move it, or rename it to anything that does not match lib*_plugin.dll, VLC will loose the native Matroska plugin. Then it will probably fallback to parsing the file with libavformat. VLC cannot use the libmatroska.dll as is.I deleted libmkv_plugin.dll or renamed libmatroska.dll and used it in its place VLC played the video fine. Can VLC .mkv Module be that sensitive to a glitch in a download.
Well apparently it didn't work I don't see anything newOK I will use the upload link you created to send it to you.
Let me know when you receive the video, the upload link does not give any indication that its being uploaded or not.
What I did was; I renamed (libmatroska.dll - libmkv_plugin.dll). And relpace VLC's libmkv_plugin.dll with it.No. If you remove libmkv_plugin.dll, move it, or rename it to anything that does not match lib*_plugin.dll, VLC will loose the native Matroska plugin. Then it will probably fallback to parsing the file with libavformat. VLC cannot use the libmatroska.dll as is.I deleted libmkv_plugin.dll or renamed libmatroska.dll and used it in its place VLC played the video fine. Can VLC .mkv Module be that sensitive to a glitch in a download.
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