The Following User Says Thank You to rla1999 For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-07-16
, 00:22
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Posts: 250 |
Thanked: 122 times |
Joined on May 2009
@ Colorado
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#2
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The Following User Says Thank You to jperez2009 For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-07-16
, 06:39
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Posts: 3,790 |
Thanked: 5,718 times |
Joined on Mar 2006
@ Vienna, Austria
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#3
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The Following User Says Thank You to benny1967 For This Useful Post: | ||
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2009-07-16
, 16:42
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Posts: 23 |
Thanked: 2 times |
Joined on Mar 2007
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#4
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Google is your friend when it comes to finding converter software.
Convert to MP4/FLV/AVI, install MPlayer and view either in MPlayer, Media Player, Canola2 (resource heavy), KMPlayer, etc.
MV4 to MP4 Search Results
MV4 to FLV Search Results
MV4 to AVI Search Results
Jesse~
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2009-07-16
, 16:43
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Posts: 23 |
Thanked: 2 times |
Joined on Mar 2007
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#5
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as far as I know, there's no such thing as an M4V file... technically. it's just a file extension that's used by some vendors instead of the MP4 you'd normally see.
So what you have is an MPEG4 file. If it's created for playback on an Apple device, it's probably MPEG4/AVC (=H.264) instead of the regular MPEG4/ASP.
N800/N810 does play such files. There are restrictions to bitrate and other encoding parameters, though, so if it doesn't play, it's not because it's "M4V", but because it happens to be not the right kind of M4V.
Depending on which platform you're running on your desktop, use any method described in the Wiki to make the file run.
(Oh, btw: on H.264 files, Nokia's Media Player usually does a better job than mplayer and other players using mplayer as their backend.)
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2009-07-17
, 02:47
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Posts: 4,030 |
Thanked: 1,633 times |
Joined on Jul 2007
@ nd usa
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#6
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Any feedback would be greatly appreciated.
Thank you.
RLA1999