Xem video tuyệt vời với K-lite Codec
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Nếu thỉnh thoảng khi bạn nghe một bài nhạc mới hay xem một phim mới mà bắt gặp thông báo từ phần mềm xem phim (nghe nhạc) là không nhận ra định dạng tập tin hay codec tập tin thì có khả năng là máy tính của bạn chưa có đầy đủ các loại codec (Codec là viết tắt của chữ Compressor-decompressor). Có nhiều codec được cung cấp từ nhà cung cấp phần mềm chơi nhạc/xem phim như Microsoft, ... . Đối với những nhà cung cấp lớn như vậy thì thường chỉ miễn phí những codec phổ thông còn những codec độc chiêu thì lại phải trả tiền lisence. Thế nhưng, bên cạnh đó, cũng không thiếu những codec miễn phí. Điển hình đó là K-Lite Codec Pack. K-Lite Codec Pack là một tập miễn phí các codec và phần mềm tiện ích . Codecs cần thiết cho các phần mềm chơi nhạc và video để giải mã dữ liệu và chuyển thành âm thanh, hình ảnh. Rất dễ cài đặt, có tùy chọn cho người dùng chỉ cài đặt những phần mình cần. Bên cạnh đó, trong K-Lite Codec Pack có kèm phần mềm xem phim kinh điển nhưng hiệu quả Media Player Classic 6.
K-Lite Codec Pack có 3 phiên bản khác nhau: Basic Version, Standard Version và Full Version.
Các tính năng của Full version: Player:
* Media Player Classic 6.4.9.0+ SVN build 2006-10-16 - This is a full-featured player which has internal decoding support for DVD, MPEG-1/2, MP2, MP3, AAC, AC3 and DTS. It also has internal support for opening MP4, Matroska and Ogg containers. Media Player Classic is also capable of playing QuickTime and RealMedia content if those codecs are installed.
ffdshow:
* ffdshow revision 696 - ffdshow is a very powerful DirectShow filter can decode various audio and video formats. For example: DivX, Xvid, MPEG-4, H.263, H.264, MPEG1, MPEG2, FLV1, FLV4, MJPEG, CinePack, VP3, huffyuv, Theora, AAC, AC3, DTS, MP1, MP2, MP3 and TrueAudio. When using ffdshow you don't need to install separate DirectShow filters for all of these formats.
* extra plugins - ff_kernelDeint.dll, TomsMoComp_ff.dll, FLT_ffdshow.dll, ff_samplerate.dll
* ffdshow VFW interface - For encoding into various formats: MPEG-4, DV, H.263, Theora, MPEG-2, MPEG-1, MJPEG and a couple more.
DirectShow video filters:
* Xvid 1.1.2 - For decoding Xvid video. This is currently the most popular video format.
* DivX 6.2.5.34 - For decoding DivX video.
* On2 VP6 6.4.2.0 - For decoding VP6 video. This format is not very common.
* On2 VP7 7.0.10.0 - For decoding VP7 video. This format is not very common.
* MPEG-1/2 (Cyberlink) 6.0.0.3402
* MPEG-1/2 (DScaler5) 0.0.8.0
* MPEG-1/2 (Gabest) 1.0.0.3
* MPEG-1/2 (MainConcept) 1.0.0.78
* MPEG-1/2 (Ligos) 4.0.0.77 - For playing MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 video. Cyberlink, Intervideo and DScaler5 also support playback of DVD video in Windows Media Player and Windows Media Center. A DVD audio decoder needs to be selected separately.
VFW video codecs:
* Xvid 1.1.2 - For encoding video in the Xvid format.
* x264 revision 600 - For encoding video in the H.264 format. We don't recommend using the VFW system to encode H.264 video. It is better to use a CLI based solution, such as MeGUI.
* Windows Media 9 VCM 9.0.1.369 - For decoding Windows Media 9 audio and video. - For encoding video in the Windows Media 9 format.
* On2 VP6 6.4.2.0 Encoding - For encoding video in the VP6 format.
* On2 VP7 7.0.10.0 Encoding - For encoding video in the VP7 format.
* Intel Indeo 5.2562.15.54 - For decoding Indeo 5 video. - For encoding video in the Indeo 5 format.
* Intel Indeo 4.51.16.2 - For decoding Indeo 4 video. - For encoding video in the Indeo 4 format.
* Intel Indeo 3.24.15.03 - For decoding Indeo 3 video. - For encoding video in the Indeo 3 format.
* Intel I.263 2.55.1.16 - For decoding I.263 video. - For encoding video in the I.263 format.
* huffyuv 2.1.1 CCE Patch 0.2.5 - For decoding huffyuv video. - For encoding video in the huffyuv format. huffyuv is a lossless (no quality loss) video compression format.
* I420 (Helix) 1.2 - For decoding from and encoding in the I420 format.
* YV12 (Helix) 1.2 - For decoding from and encoding in the YV12 format.
DirectShow audio filters:
* MP3 (Fraunhofer) 1.9.0.311 - For decoding MP3 audio.
* AC3/DTS/LPCM (AC3Filter) 1.11 - For decoding AC3 and DTS audio. Also decodes DVD audio.
* MP1/MP2 (MainConcept) 1.0.0.78 - For decoding MP1 and MP2 audio.
* Vorbis (CoreVorbis) 1.1.0.79 - For decoding Vorbis audio. This is the recommended Vorbis decoder.
* AAC (CoreAAC) 1.2.0.575 - For decoding AAC audio.
* MusePack 1.0.0.3 - For decoding MusePack audio files (.mpc).
* Monkey's Audio 1.00 - For decoding Monkey's audio files (.ape).
* WavPack (CoreWavPack) 1.0.3 - For decoding WavPack audio files (.wv).
* FLAC (illiminable) 0.73.1936 - For decoding FLAC audio files (.flac).
* Voxware MetaSound 1.0.0.12 - For decoding Voxware MetaSound audio.
ACM audio codecs:
* MP3 (Fraunhofer) 3.3.2
* MP3 (LAME) 3.97 - This can be used to encode MP3 streams/files.
* AC3 (ffcHandler) 1.3.1 - Required for opening movies that have an AC3 audio stream in applications like VirtualDub.
* Vorbis 0.0.3.6 - Required for AVI files that contains Vorbis audio. These files are very uncommon.
* DivX ;) Audio 4.2.0.0 - Some old DivX 3.11 videos use this audio codec.
DirectShow source filters:
* AVI splitter (Gabest) 1.0.0.7
* AVI splitter (Haali Media Splitter) 1.6.338.23 - For opening audio and video streams in a AVI container (.avi files).
* MP4 splitter (Gabest) 1.0.0.3
* MP4 splitter (Haali Media Splitter) 1.6.338.23 - For opening audio and video streams in a MP4 container (.mp4 files).
* Matroska splitter (Haali Media Splitter) 1.6.338.23
* Matroska splitter (Gabest) 1.0.2.9 - For opening audio and video streams in a Matroska container (.mkv and .mka files).
* Ogg splitter (Haali Media Splitter) 1.6.338.23 - For opening audio and video streams in an Ogg container (.ogm and .ogg files).
* FLV splitter (Gabest) 1.0.0.1 - For opening audio and video streams in a FLV container (.flv files).
* TS splitter (Haali Media Splitter) 1.6.338.23 - For opening audio and video streams in a MPEG Transport Stream container (.ts and .tp files). This filter is a bit buggy.
* MPEG demuxer (Cyberlink) 1.0.0.4528
* MPEG demuxer (Gabest) 1.0.0.3
* MPEG demuxer (MainConcept) 1.0.1.20
* MPEG demuxer (Elecard) 1.0.31.51211
* MPEG demuxer (Ligos) 4.0.0.77 - For opening audio and video streams in a MPEG Program Stream container (.mpg and .mpeg files).
* The Gabest demuxer works best in combination with the Gabest MPEG decoder. The Gabest demuxer also supports .ts files.
* The Elecard demuxer should not be used in combination with the DScaler5 MPEG decoder. The Ligos demuxer only works in combination with the Ligos decoder.
* MP3 Source (DCoder) 1.3 - For reading .mp3 files. Works better than the default source filter in Windows.
* SHOUTcast Source 1.0.0.1 - For playing SHOUTcast streams.
DirectShow subtitle filter:
* DirectVobSub (VSFilter) 2.37
* DirectVobSub (VSFilter) 2.33 - DirectVobSub is a filter for displaying subtitles (ssa/ass, srt and vobsub). Your subtitle file(s) should have the same filename as your video file (for example: MovieName.avi + MovieName.idx + MovieName.sub) and should be in the same folder as your video file. Then the subtitles will automatically be displayed in most players. Use version 2.33 if you have problems when using version 2.37.
DirectShow audio filters (general purpose):
* Morgan Multimedia Stream Switcher 0.9.9 - Morgan Multimedia Stream Switcher can be used to switch between audio streams in an AVI video file that has multiple audio streams. These types of video files are not very common. Both Media Player Classic and BSplayer have this functionality build-in. This means that you do NOT need this filter if you use one of those players. This filter is known to cause various playback problems, so it is NOT recommended to install this filter.
Audio encoding tools:
* LAME CLI and DLL 3.97 - Installs LAME CLI (command line interface) and DLL. These can be used by programs like ExactAudioCopy to encode MP3 files.
* LameDropXPd 3.97 - This tool can be used to encode MP3 files.
* OggDropXPd 1.8.9 aoTuVb5 - This tool can be used to encode Ogg Vorbis files.
Tools:
* GSpot Codec Information Appliance 2.60 rc1 - GSpot is a tool that can tell you exactly which codecs are needed to play AVI and MPEG files. It can also perform a render test (for all types video files) that shows you which filters are being used to play that file.
* VobSubStrip 0.11 - With this tool you can strip languages from VobSub subtitle files (.idx and .sub files).
* GraphEdit build 041201 - GraphEdit is a visual tool for building and testing DirectShow filter graphs.
* MMCompView 1.10 - This tool shows a list of all installed filters and codecs. It also allows you to enable or disable them.
* AVI Fixed 2.0b1 - This tool can rebuild the index section of .avi files. This can make files with broken frames playable. In some cases it will also solve synchronisation problems and incorrectly displayed movie lengths.
* FourCC Changer - The FourCC (Four Character Code) Changer is a program for changing the FourCC of a video file, which is used to identify which codec should be used to decode the file. This tool is for expert users only.
* Bitrate Calculator - This can be used to calculate the bitrate to use when encoding a movie. the bitrate to use when encoding a movie.
SAN FRANCISCO--The wild days of Web 2.0 may have thrown their last sheep. Here's how you can tell that things have gotten serious: at O'Reilly Media and Techweb's Web 2.0 Summit this week, people actually showed up for breakfast.
That's because they probably weren't out as late. The party scene at tech conferences tends to be a bacchanalia--take South by Southwest Interactive, with enough events to make any little black book burst at the seams, or TechCrunch50 a few months ago, where rumor has it that a high-profile dot-commer got so drunk at an afterparty that conference organizers politely asked him to delete some intoxicated Twitter posts.
The buttoned-up Web 2.0 Summit had only one legitimate blowout: the launch party for News Corp.'s MySpace Music. The venue was the city's stately Old Mint, a landmarked Greek Revival building dating back to the 1870s that, true to its name, used to house the manufacturing of money--a harsh irony in these post-boom days.
To be sure, the annual Web 2.0 Summit is intended to be a more highbrow affair in comparison to its more sprawling Web 2.0 Expo sibling. Under the glass chandeliers and marble pillars of the downtown Palace Hotel, an ornate vestige of a bygone San Francisco, the attitude was all business. But with the economy in the tank, and dot-com dreams getting shattered by the day with each layoff announcement, it was probably a little bit more businesslike than usual.
At a Web 2.0 Summit start-up mock-pitch event called Launchpad, organizer John Battelle says the companies onstage would not be fly-by-night start-ups, but rather emerging companies with solid business models and the potential to have a big social impact.
(Credit: Josh Lowensohn/CNET Networks)
With a "Web meets world" theme, the speakers weren't trendy dot-com entrepreneurs, but rather industry leaders like former Vice President Al Gore and Tesla Motors CEO Elon Musk, as well as celebrities such as cyclist Lance Armstrong and The Omnivore's Dilemma author Michael Pollan. For a start-up mock-pitch event called "Launchpad," conference organizer John Battelle reminded the audience that the companies onstage would not be fly-by-night start-ups, but rather emerging companies with solid business models and the potential to have a big social impact.
But this sort of discussion can get ahead of itself. A conference about changing the world, though its intentions may be wholly pragmatic, can devolve into starry-eyed futurism when the present needs so much attention. This was something that began to rear its head when venture capital veteran John Doerr called the recession "the greatest economic opportunity of our lifetimes" and when Intel CEO Paul Otellini, despite having just said some somber words about the recession and having urged solidarity as we "get through this thing," paraded out a shiny new "smart camera" prototype that elicited plenty of oohs and ahhs upon demonstrating that it could translate Chinese into English.
"I like coming here," Otellini said to the audience. "It's a respite from, sort of, watching the stock market crash every day, and think about what the future is going to hold from us."
He's right; talking about the future, and listening to industry luminaries do so, is important. On the other hand, it can happen at the expense of the present. Trendy "health 2.0" companies are exciting, but the more pressing problem in the United States is that millions of Americans can't afford health care coverage, let alone a 23andMe spit test.
San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom hails Barack Obama's campaign mastery of social media.
(Credit: Josh Lowensohn/CNET Networks)
In a panel about how the Web is changing politics, digerati icon Arianna Huffington and San Francisco mayor Gavin Newsom hailed Barack Obama's campaign's mastery of social media and acknowledged that the new president-elect needs to keep using these powerful tools when he inherits a national mess in January. They were less descriptive, though, regarding how.
Elon Musk, the PayPal co-founder now at the helm of troubled electric-car start-up Tesla Motors, took the stage on Friday afternoon and spoke candidly about his company's issues. After the economic meltdown, Tesla nixed a plan to raise about $100 million because it would've involved "very difficult terms" with investors. (The company raised $40 million instead.) He used a military analogy to describe the carmaker's subsequent layoffs: "(It's the) difference between sort of special forces and regular Army, and if you're going to get through a really tough environment...you need to have a really high level of dedication and talent."
But when Battelle, interviewing Musk onstage, asked if the beleaguered Tesla would actually make money, the serial investor replied, "Yeah, yeah, absolutely!" and said he still believes in Tesla's strategy: release a six-figure sports car, the Roadster, first, then eventually move on to more affordable electric vehicles. "It's important to emphasize that the point of Tesla, the reason I funded it and put so much time into it, is to get to mass-market electric cars," Musk said. "To get there, you need to start with something."
The digital futurism didn't make its way to MySpace's party on Thursday night, with performances by Lionel Richie and paparazzi staple DJ AM. It was a big success: the Old Mint was packed to its gilded walls with Valley notables from VC legend Ron Conway to actor-turned-entrepreneur Ashton Kutcher. But the atmosphere was tinged with an acknowledgment that the Web 2.0 Summit and the MySpace afterparty, dual doses of Old San Francisco and dot-com glory, could be the last such revelry for quite some time.
Layoffs were just the tip of the iceberg. In the tech industry's meet-and-greet culture, the conference and event circuit is the next to get hit hard by the economic slowdown, partygoers predicted. O'Reilly's own Web 2.0 Expo in Tokyo had already been canceled earlier this fall, with an employee citing lack of sponsor interest. John Battelle announced to the audience that next year's Web 2.0 Summit would be held not at the Palace but at a less glitzy Westin hotel down the street.
Some small conferences, particularly those held outside the United States that rely on Valley types to jet across an ocean or two for attendance, were also gossiped about as big question marks. Individuals were remarkably candid about their companies' own chances: "I give myself four, six months," one entrepreneur told me.
Maybe, once the constant talk of saving the world had subsided, the Internet's thinkers were finally willing to focus on what's happening now. Or maybe they're just more honest after a few drinks.
Headphones used with MP3 digital music players like the iPod may interfere with heart pacemakers and implantable defibrillators, U.S. researchers said Sunday.
The MP3 players themselves posed no threat to pacemakers and defibrillators, used to normalize heart rhythm. But strong little magnets inside the headphones can foul up the devices if placed within 1.2 inches of them, the researchers told an American Heart Association meeting in New Orleans.
Dr. William Maisel of the Medical Device Safety Institute at Beth Israel Medical Center in Boston led a team that tested eight models of MP3 player headphones, including clip-on and earbud types, in 60 defibrillator and pacemaker patients.
They placed the headphones on the patients' chests, directly over the devices. The headphones interfered with the heart devices in about a quarter of the patients--14 of the 60--and interference was twice as likely in those with a defibrillator than with a pacemaker.
Another study presented at the meeting showed that cellular phones equipped with wireless technology known as Bluetooth are unlikely to interfere with pacemakers.
A pacemaker sends electrical impulses to the heart to speed up or slow cardiac rhythm. The magnet, however, could make it deliver a signal no matter what the heart rate is, possibly leading to palpitations or arrhythmia, the researchers said.
An implantable cardioverter defibrillator signals the heart to normalize its rhythm if it gets too fast or slow. A magnet could de-activate it, making it ignore an abnormal heart rhythm instead of delivering an electrical shock to normalize it.
The devices usually go back to working the right way after the headphones are removed, the researchers said.
"The main message here is: it's fine for patients to use their headphones normally, meaning they can listen to music and keep the headphones in their ears. But what they should not do is put the headphones near their device," Maisel said in a telephone interview.
So that means people with pacemakers or defibrillators should not place the headphones in a shirt pocket or coat pocket near the chest when they are not being used, drape them over their chest or have others who are wearing headphones rest their head on the patient's chest, Maisel said.
Most of the headphones had magnetic field strengths more than 20 times higher than the threshold for interfering with pacemakers or defibrillators, he said. They were made by Sony, Philips Electronics, and others.
MP3 players like Apple's iPod are popular consumer electronic devices. In January, a U.S. Food and Drug Administration researcher said the iPod is unlikely to interfere with pacemakers because it does not produce enough of an electromagnetic field to interfere with the devices.
Brian Markwalter of the Consumer Electronics Association industry group urged consumers to inform themselves about proper use of products with magnets, and encouraged people with pacemakers to understand how headphones can be used safely.
The Web 2.0 Summit wrapped up Friday with conversations about the Internet, politics, renewable energy, and space. Below are videos of on-stage talks, courtesy of TechWeb.
In a panel discussion in which The Huffington Post founder Arianna Huffington is joined by San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom and Democratic campaign organizer Joe Trippi, Huffington argues that "were it not for the Internet, Barack Obama would not be president," in part because the blogosphere has "an obsessive-compulsive disorder." Trippi agrees that "the (Internet) medium demands authenticity."
In response to Huffington's remark that "politicians definitely need to adjust how they behave," never assuming that they are having a private conversation with anyone in public, New York magazine's John Heilemann says to Newsom, "So Gavin, there's no off-the-record ever again now."
Newsom, who says he is "obsessed with Facebook," agrees: Politicians need to "get over it," he says. "You're on the record. If you get into public life, you should expect nothing short of it."
Continuing their discussion, the quartet focus on how the political spectrum is changing, largely because of the vast exposure to information that the Internet affords. But not everyone can afford to access the Internet regularly, Newsom says.
"We have a huge digital-divide problem," argues the San Francisco mayor, who has been working hard to bring his city municipal wireless broadband. "We are slipping; we are not making any real advancements." Hundreds of thousands of people still rely on network television to gather their political insights, he says.
Meanwhile, Huffington says citizen journalism on the Internet is playing a major role in transforming the lingo and polarization of American politics.
"We are so completely used to talking about right versus left," she says. "It's a lazy way to talk...If you really want to transform politics, you have to transcend these divisions and really define the new center, and I can't really think of anything more important."
For The Huffington Post, at least, "right" and "left" are now "the forbidden words."
Newsom, a Democrat, chimes in: "If you don't want to be part of the Democratic Party or the Republican Party, you better be part of the get-it-done party, and the peril of all of this is that you've got to deliver."
Next up: Web 2.0 Summit moderator John Battelle, head of Federated Media Publishing and longtime journalist, invites serial entrepreneur Elon Musk up to the stage to talk about the three areas Musk identified in college in which he wanted to get involved: the Internet, renewable energy, and space exploration.
Musk acknowledges somewhat smugly that he wasn't confident during college that he'd be able to innovate in the latter two areas; the Web provided the easiest (read: least expensive) endeavor. "I'm more of an engineer than anything else, I guess."
But once the PayPal co-founder could afford to buy himself anything he wants, he says, he started investing in cutting-edge technologies such as solar energy (SolarCity), electric vehicles (Tesla Motors), and space travel (SpaceX).
"The point of Tesla is to get to mass-market electric cars, but to get there, you need to start with something. And if you look at any technology developments, in almost any sphere, you start with something which is expensive," Musk says, referring to the Roadster's current $109,000 price tag. "The first thing is about making the technology work, and then you go from there to optimizing the technology."
Musk points out that, like cell phones and laptops, in their early days, "internal combustion engine cars were considered toys for rich people, because everyone then was riding a horse."
In discussing recent Tesla news regarding fund-raising and layoffs, Musk compares running a successful start-up to running a highly trained military unit. He says taking a "special-forces approach" is necessary to becoming large and successful.
"The minimum passing grade is excellent," he says. It's "the difference between special forces and Army."
Closing the summit is former U.S. Vice President Al Gore, who famously went from losing the 2000 presidential election to winning an Academy Award for the global-warming documentary An Inconvenient Truth and a Nobel Peace Prize. He came to the Web 2.0 Summit to talk, at least in part, about Current Media, a Web video company he co-founded that partnered up with Web darlings Digg and Twitter to cover the election last week.
"The Internet democratizes information," Gore says, arguing that Sen. Barack Obama's win had much to do with how his campaign made use of the Web.
Gore also focuses on the motivations behind Web innovation, and he uses a lesson he'd learned from a dog trainer to illustrate his point.
"A puppy has to have a purpose," he says. Likewise, "Web 2.0 has to have a purpose. We have to have a purpose."
As the conversation turns to the collective human purpose of cutting down on pollution and its devastating effects, Gore notes that people generally need a sense of urgency to act.
"The urgency center of the brain is geared to snakes and spiders and fire," Gore says, explaining that people generally require a bit more processing and analyzing, as well as conscious decision making, to react to many other potential dangers. "It needs to be stored in the cloud. It's the aggregate bandwidth that counts...so that we can respond to it collectively."