Jodo Kast Jul 17, 2006
I just downloaded the 2 hour and 16 minute time attack from this page:
http://speeddemosarchive.com/CastlevaniaCotM.html
It's 2.03 GB and won't play in Winamp or DivX. Any ideas? DivX claims the file is corrupt.
I just downloaded the 2 hour and 16 minute time attack from this page:
http://speeddemosarchive.com/CastlevaniaCotM.html
It's 2.03 GB and won't play in Winamp or DivX. Any ideas? DivX claims the file is corrupt.
*blink*
How in the world is that a speed run when it's beed done in like, 35?
*checks*
Ah, single segment, so it has to deal with the randomness....
-Joshua
I just downloaded the 2 hour and 16 minute time attack from this page:
http://speeddemosarchive.com/CastlevaniaCotM.html
It's 2.03 GB and won't play in Winamp or DivX. Any ideas? DivX claims the file is corrupt.
Some programs have issues playing files back that are larger than 2GB, especially if your filesystem is FAT32. Not sure what to suggest otherwise.
Jodo Kast wrote:I just downloaded the 2 hour and 16 minute time attack from this page:
http://speeddemosarchive.com/CastlevaniaCotM.html
It's 2.03 GB and won't play in Winamp or DivX. Any ideas? DivX claims the file is corrupt.
Some programs have issues playing files back that are larger than 2GB, especially if your filesystem is FAT32. Not sure what to suggest otherwise.
Actually, you unknowingly told me what to do. I'll just download the lower quality version and it'll be smaller than 2 GB. This might explain why DVD's are broken up into 1 GB chunks.
Video Lan Media Player - seems to do quite well at playing anything under the sun for me..(including PAL DVDs..) Admittedly, the quality does not look as good as it could - but if you're tired of putting on codec, after codec, and/or generally destroying your video play back ability of your computer...give 'er a shot...
cheers
- Brandon
Some programs have issues playing files back that are larger than 2GB, especially if your filesystem is FAT32. Not sure what to suggest otherwise.
Aahhh...so THAT'S why my Access databases blow up when they hit 2 GB. I had always wondered why Access couldn't handle anything larger than that.