Have you tried installing any one of these? The Orban. Unfortunately Free-Codecs. I take it you mean Free-Codecs. When you talk about referenced package, do you mean the one referenced in the guide or the one you linked to in your first post? This is not a link you will find in the guide on what DirectShow filters to install for M4A file support.
It may work equally well, perhaps even better, that I don't know. Have you tried installing any one of these filters on your Windows 10 computer to see if it will make or break ImgBurn? It's understandable that it doesn't specifically say it's made to work with Windows I'm pretty sure that ImgBurn itself was never designed with Windows 10 in mind, yet by some software magic it's still alive and kicking.
I think most users will only use it these days to archive their optical disc collection, not to burn new optical discs, and even less so to author Audio CD discs with it. Any source on this? In what context? Then why is it throwing the same type of error you see in Windows 7?
Mere presence of M4A file format support you see in Windows 10 is not a guarantee that you will not need DirectShow filters to enable MP4 encoding and decoding in a given software application. The term "support" goes deeper than that. Things have to be put in a context, because everything is relative. You may be able to play MP4 files on a Windows 10 computer without any additional software, but that may only be possible if you use the default media player that ships with Windows If you try using a different media player, especially an older one, let's say Then you may not be so lucky.
I'm pretty sure Winamp still installs on Windows 10 and plays what it was designed to play, but M4A files are not on the list of things it will play. Unless of course someone comes along and hacks it to play things it's not supposed to. A similar thing has happened with Windows Media Player, per your description. I would call that a "beneficial bug". It's not supposed to let you play things it was not designed to play. But if it works, it works, be happy for what does work and not sad for what doesn't.
For it to fully support M4A in all the ways you expect it would need to be reprogrammed. I know nothing about the implementation details of neither Windows Media Player nor the new "Groove Music" media player, but if I have to guess I would say that Microsoft has switched to using Media Foundation rather than DirectShow in its new media player.
It's something that ImgBurn isn't programmed to take advantage of. It's relying on the old technology called DirectShow, and there may not be any easy way to bridge the two for backwards compatibility with older software such as ImgBurn.
M4a seems to have 2 codecs associated with it. The one initially referenced was found by doing a web search duckduckgo that specifically asked for Win7. However, it was also from free-codecs. Statement is based on findings lots of information about how to use the API but nothing about the need to add anything to the Windows 10 base software.
Yes this explanation fits with my experience as well as a few more trials I've undertaken which I'll post separately from this reply. At this point, I concluded that I did NOT have much of any reason to think that either package might work on either system, which led to the idea of trying the DSP-worx package on Win7. This failed but with a different error message both screenshot and log file attached. It failed. I suppose even though still perplexed this means I am lucky to have gotten IMGburn to work properly on both Win7 and Win10 prior to free-codecs disappearing even if it means using different Directshow Filter packages on each system.
If free-codecs re-appears I may experiment with the codecs mentioned in the guide. Will post findings if that happens. You are the last person on Earth to have visited and checked out of Free-Codecs. None of those two domain names are responding anymore! That's really great news! Nicely done! Perhaps LUK can add that link to the guide? Assuming of course the Free-Codecs site comes back online again.
One suggestion I will make here is that you need to do your testing cleanly, i. This is a recipe for disaster and unreliable results. I hope ImgBurn still works on both your systems after these experiments. Enhanced Video Renderer. Video renderer with the same core functionality and plug-in model as the Media Foundation EVR media sink.
Opens and reads local files of many different data formats and passes the data to a parser filter. Works with any source file that can be identified by a Uniform Resource Locator URL and whose media major type is stream.
Internal Script Command Renderer. Microsoft AC3 Encoder. Not supported for third-party applications. Demultiplexes MPEG-2 transport streams that are delivered in push mode, and program streams that are delivered in push or pull mode. Parses a simple file format that enables multiple file names to be specified as though they were one file. Designed specifically for DVD playback and broadcast video streams with line closed captioning.
Superseded by Video Mixing Renderer. QuickTime Movie Parser. Used in video capture graphs to split the video stream into a preview stream and a capture stream. How are we doing? Please help us improve Stack Overflow. Take our short survey. Stack Overflow for Teams — Collaborate and share knowledge with a private group. Create a free Team What is Teams? Collectives on Stack Overflow. Learn more. Ask Question. Asked 8 years, 7 months ago.
Active 8 years, 7 months ago. Viewed times. Improve this question. Nelrum Nelrum 2 2 silver badges 9 9 bronze badges. Add a comment.
0コメント