Computer Stuff /
Intel Indeo video/audio codec. Through the 1990s the Intel Indeo codec was very popular, many computer video games and other software utilized it to encode their videos and audio. Indeo seems to be a blend, more precisely a portmanteau, of 'Intel Video'. Originally the Indeo codecs were developed by the Intel Architecture Labs since 1992. No audio compressor could be found to compress the source audio format. When i take the movie into Gspot it says i should be able to play the audio ok as i have AC3Filter & Nero digital audio decoder installed. All my other Xvid,Divx and mpg movies play fine. Thanks alot for any help.
Indeo Video IV50 on Windows 7 FixRunning into unnecessary problems trying to play a movie encoded with the accursed IV50 codec? I sure did. Some of my AVI videos were encoded with the Ligos Indeo XP Video codec awhile back via Pinnacle Studio 8.12.7, and has since stirred up a fuss trying to let me access them in Windoze 7. After much scouring the search results and tinkering and testing stuff, I believe I finally have that gremlin drawn and quartered.
First and foremost, you will need the Ligos Indeo Legacy Package (IV31, IV32, IV41, IV50, YVU9), which I believe is freeware according to my source. It will install Indeo Video codecs for 3, 4, 5, and Indeo Raw (YVU9). The filesize should be about 2,068,266 bytes. You can get it at...
Once installed, incredibly enough (believe it or not) you may still run into problems opening your IV50 encoded video. Why? That's because the Indeo installer FAILED (tch! tch!) to register the dll on Windows 7! Is it Indeo's fault, or WINDOZE SEVEN's fault, or BOTH? Who knows? Who cares? OK, I do, but that's a debate for another time. Right now I am itching to share the solution for the good of all mankind.
So go ahead and click that round Microsoft thingy at the bottom leftmost part of your desktop. Then click on All Programs followed by Accessories. Look for Command Prompt and right-click on it. Then click on Run as administrator. Helloooo, are you paying attention there? There's a reason why it's ITALICIZED and BOLDED! I cannot stress enough how *VERY* important this Run as administrator priviledge is, which is a very common problem in Windows 7 with some programs. Ignore it for this instance, and you will be smacked with a pop-up window out of nowhere happily informing you that '... the codec was loaded but the call to DllRegisterServer failed with the error code 0x8000ffff'.
Assuming that you had followed the given instructions right down to the letter, you should be idling at the command prompt right now. Go ahead and type in the following:
regsvr32 ir50_32.dll
Press your Enter key, and voila, *hopefully* your problem should be solved. I know it did mine.
Hubby
Tagged as: Tagged as dll, indeo, indeo iv50, indeo video, iv31, iv32, iv41, iv50, iv50 error, iv50 fix, iv50 help, iv50 problem, ligos, ligos indeo, pinnacle studio, regsvr32, run as administrator, win 7, win7, windows 7, windoze 7, yvu9
I've owned a JVC-GRD250 for about 7 or 8 months now. Since then, I've been capturing footage and editing it in Premiere 7 no problem.Then something changed.
I have no idea what that something is. I feel like I've exhausted the possibilities, so I'm turning to the internet for help.I'll try to outline the situation as much as possible:Upon opening a captured avi (that is, captured before the problem began) my computer struggles to play the video.
It.does. open, and I see an image here and there, but it's dropping most of the frames. Enough that it might as well be unopenable. Audio also stutters in and out.The same thing happens (albeit to varying degrees) whether I attempt to view it in Premiere, Media Player, or DivX.The fact that my computer could handle these at one point leads me to believe it's a software issue, and not a hardware issue.I've reviewed existing topics in numerous forums already.I've installed a number of codecs and codec packages to no avail.When I open one of the files in, it tells me I've got 3 codecs that should be compatible with the file. AVI Draw, DV Video Decoder,.
('DirectShow is apparently able to play the file as well.' )As the topic subject suggests, I've also discovered that Premiere can no longer capture without dropping at least 10% of the frames, if not more. This made me think that perhaps it's a hardware problem (firewire), but an update of the drivers was unfruitful.Through a little more investigation, I've found that my computer can also no longer play some other files it used to be able to.GSpot tells me:4CC: mjpgName: Motion JPEG including Huffman Tables.and that 2 codecs should be compatible, AVI Draw, and DV Video Decoder.
('DirectShow is apparently able to play the file as well.' You well have compounded the problem by turning to codec packs to solve this. They often install conflicting codecs and settings and cause more trouble than they are worth.That your machine once worked and now doesn't does not necessarily means software. Your symptoms could also be the result of a failing or badly fragmented hard drive. I would start by running a defrag, then a check disk across both drives. Make sure both drives are running in Ultra DMA Mode (probably 2 or 5). I would also uninstall all codec packs and codecs that you can.I think you have started out with an annoying but relatively simple problem (fragmentation), and turned it into a larger one (screwed codecs from codec packs).
If you can clean things up, you can then use to identify the codecs you really need, and install just those as required. Just now, I confirmed that both my disks are configured to DMA. In windows, I mean.In the bios, I changed it to DMA 5 for each.PIO still said 4, but I'm assuming that doesn't matter unless Windows is telling my computer to.use. it in the first place.I uninstalled most of the codecs I had installed, and there's no effect, even upon uninstallation.hold up, okay I just went back into my video codecs properties in the device manager, and they're all there again.
If I remove it, click OK, and then go back into it, the removed codec has reappeared. What?Also, just took note that my computer usage goes up to 100% each time the video stutters. Isolate and Identify.I would go back to square one. Reformat and re-install. Install NO repeat NO codecs. Attempt to play a simple MPG1 file, this ability is built-in to windows. This will test basic hardware ability, if it fails, something is majorly wrong in the original hardware.
As soon as you start adding software, particularly in the uncontrolled and unspecific manner in which you have proceeded, you remove any specific useful information.Isolate and Identify.If the MPG1 is OK, then install One (1) and One (1) only, software DVD player. Play an MPG2 or DVD file. This will be a more throughput intensive operation than the MPG1, by using One (1), standard, commercial app you have eliminated, almost completely, the possibility of a hosed codec or app. Ideally the DVD player prog is installed from a commercial CD, not a downloaded app.As it is, all I can tell you is that either you have a hardware problem, or one or more of the 35 things you have installed is defective or conflicting.Some guesses - ASSuming that you did not install some software immediately before the problem began, and then forgot about it, this would point to virus or hardware failure. Again ASSuming that you did not repeat the install of the virus after the format and multiple installs, that would leave hardware failure. It could have been a randomly corrupted file, but the recurrance after the format virtually eliminates this, unless it was a virus or you started with a corrupted file and then added a virus later which simulated the same type of error, which would be unlikely.Are ANY of the files installed after the re-format things that have been recently acquired?The valuable key which you thru away is that the only thing which remains constant after a format is hardware.
Your multiple installs after the format is what thru away the value gained from the format.