Thankxxx Number 13, you just saved my computer from been thrown out of the 36th floor into the street on the 5th avenue.
And probably been broken to pieces, which means you just saved me a whole new computer to buy for my girlfriend + the embarrassment of breaking, punching and destroying her PC.
the problem is for some reason(avi-mp3-options is uncheck and this is the reason for that error. when you check all box in file types will fix the problem and you can play avi-mp3 or any file abailable wiht your windows media player 11.
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instale el nuevo reproductor windows media player y de repente varias peliculas no se reproducen y me pone cerrar o ayuda en la web.le doy a ayuda en la web y me sale lo siguiente:error C00D11B1
alguien me podria decir por favor que es y como puedo solucionarlo
intale la actualizacion y nada instale el nuevo reproductor windows media player y de repnte varias peliculas no se reproducen y me pone cerrar o ayuda en la web.le doy a ayuda en la web y me sale lo siguiente:error C00D11B1
alguien me podria decir por favor que es y como puedo solucionarlo
*** DRM SOLUTION **** Regarding C00D11B1 (the DRM error), everyone is focusing on the wrong thing! As soon as NetFlex tech support told me it was a PROFILE issue and that the only way to fix it was to create a new profile, I knew there had to be a better solution. A little googling revealed this simple fix (worked for me with Vista and Dell XPS200 with ATI Radeon X600 after installing latest drivers from ati.com):
Friends i am also facing the same problem. How do i rectify it. I am unable to play the .3gp files on my laptop. kindly advice. i followed the forum instructions to delete those C:\ProgramData\Microsoft\Windows\DRM\ but i am unable To find the DRM
I have no problem playing audio CD through my Sound Blaster Live! 24-bit card with: Real, iTunes, and Macrovision CDS-200 Player. Nor do I have problems with audio when watching Flash clips on YouTube.
Comment #13, you are a lifesaver, i worked on trying to fix windows media player for weeks. i tried your suggestion after hours of not getting anywhere and within minutes, it was up and running. thanks.
I am running Vista with WMP 11. I am trying to run an online class CD that has embedded videos. They are supposed to play through WMP11 and have been updated for Vista by the company. But none of the videos work in WMP. I get alternating error messages, either C00D11B1 or C00D1199.
blah blah blah, nothing worked, but i figured it out, after several cups of tea, couple of packs of smoke, and a headache. installed windows media player 10, (11 sucks ass) clicked on options, top right hand corner, next to the minimize button, went into TOOLS, the options. Click on network and UNCHECKED UDP bullshit, apply ok and hey presto works just fine, i can now watch my kick ass arsenal team do some damage. good luck
This is a great FREE tool, just edit all the songs that you can not play with this tool, adding all them and filling up all song information, and you will be able to play your MP3 again.
Please Donate something to the creator. What is 1 Dollar?
Testing more this Tool MP3TAG I found out that is you just open the folder with your MP3 music, once all your mp3s are listed on mp3tag, CTRL + A to select all or go to Edit and then select all, them CTRL + S or got to File and click on Save Tag, close program and you can play now your MP3 files.
im using HP/vista and tried everything suggested here but didnt work, then i just get a sound device update from HP website. i should have done this first before anything else. hope it works for someone else.
I have faced this problem from three days and i found your answers and tryed most of the solutions writen above , but non of this made any changes to my pc. I follow up a very simple staps and my computer now is working very well and perfect and i can hear the voice again ^_^ finaly .
Through a second check I have found out you can drag it to the videos folder then play it. Only for the process I did it went like this for the drag sequence
Original Download File Folder-> Desktop-> My Videos-> Quick Open in Windows media player classic
hi, guys,
my pc is running with win7 and 3 soundboards (onboard, vamaha usb and emu 1860). after testing all of the above tips )thx for these anyways) i still had no sound whatsoever.
so this morning i played around with the sound settings and came to a different solution that in future should be considered as well:
I had this problem recently and after a great deal of anguish solved it by downloading and installing the K-Lite codec pack from The pack is a free download and the installer is smart enough to unload all other codecs that your computer may have as well as a clean up of your registry. Just say yes to everything and your troubles will be ended.
if anyone on windows 7 is having an incredibly hard time, just reinstall windows. i tried everything above to no solution but reinstalling windows did it for me. also, windows 7 backs up your C: drive if the current operating system is also windows 7.
I tried the netflix solution, the k-lite standard solution, the reg edits, the UDP unchecking, opening ports, rolling back audio drivers, etc etc, and finally the vista codec packs from the shark.net site worked.
The update takes a little while after its done installing to start working Just saying that so no one else panics like me. Update works perfectly fine I did it myself with Internet Explorer just like the previous comments suggested.
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Windows Media Player (WMP, officially referred to as Windows Media Player Legacy to distinguish it from the new Windows Media Player introduced with Windows 11), is the first media player and media library application that Microsoft developed to play audio and video on personal computers. It has been a component of the Microsoft Windows operating system, including Windows 9x, Windows NT, Pocket PC, and Windows Mobile. Microsoft also released editions of Windows Media Player for classic Mac OS, Mac OS X, and Solaris, but has since discontinued them.
In addition to being a media player, the app can rip audio file from compact discs, burn Audio CDs or MP3 CDs, synchronize content with a digital audio player or mobile devices, and stream media over the local network. Originally, it could connect to a number of online music stores, allowing its users to purchase digital music. The default file formats are Windows Media Video (WMV), Windows Media Audio (WMA), and Advanced Systems Format (ASF), and its own XML based playlist format called Windows Playlist (WPL). The player is also able to utilize a digital rights management service in the form of Windows Media DRM.
Windows Media Player is a unique component, in that since 1999, each version of Windows came with two or more versions of it side-by-side. For example, Media Player versions 5.1, 6.4, and 8 were all included in Windows XP. Each versions of Windows may bundle several other media playback apps, namely ActiveMovie Control, CD Player, DVD Player, Windows Media Center, and Microsoft Movies & TV.
Windows Media Player 11 is the last out-of-band version of Media Player. It was made available for Windows XP and is included in Windows Vista and Windows Server 2008. Version 12 was released in 2009 along with Windows 7[b] and has not been made available for previous versions of Windows nor has it been updated ever since.[2][3] Windows 8 bundled Windows Media Player 12 along two other media player apps, namely Xbox Video and Xbox Music. The latter was renamed Groove Music in Windows 10, and then finally Media Player in Windows 11[4] which has also been backported to Windows 10.[5]
The first version of Windows Media Player appeared in 1991, when Windows 3.0 with Multimedia Extensions was released.[6] Originally called Media Player, this component was included with "Multimedia PC"-compatible machines but not available for retail sale. It was capable of playing .mmm animation files, and could be extended to support other formats.[7] It used MCI to handle media files. Being a component of Windows, Media Player shows the same version number as that of the version Windows with which it was included.
Microsoft continually produced new programs to play media files. In November of the following year, Video for Windows was introduced with the ability to play digital video files in an AVI container format,[8] with codec support for RLE and Video1, and support for playing uncompressed files. Indeo 3.2 was added in a later release. Video for Windows was first available as a free add-on to Windows 3.1, and later integrated into Windows 95 and Windows NT 4.0. In 1995, Microsoft released ActiveMovie with DirectX Media SDK. ActiveMovie incorporates a new way of dealing with media files, and adds support for streaming media (which the original Media Player could not handle). In 1996, ActiveMovie was renamed DirectShow.[9] However, Media Player continued to come with Windows until Windows XP, in which it was officially renamed Windows Media Player v5.1.[10] ("v5.1" is the version number of Windows XP).
In 1999, Windows Media Player's versioning broke away from that of Windows itself. Windows Media Player 6.4 came as an out-of-band update for Windows 95-98 and Windows NT 4.0 that co-existed with Media Player and became a built-in component of Windows 2000, Windows ME, and Windows XP with an mplayer2.exe stub allowing to use this built-in instead of newer versions.[11] Windows Media Player 7.0 and its successors also came in the same fashion, replacing each other but leaving Media Player and Windows Media Player 6.4 intact. Windows XP is the only operating system to have three different versions of Windows Media Player (v5.1, v6.4, and v8) side by side. All versions branded Windows Media Player (instead of simply Media Player) support DirectShow codecs. Windows Media Player version 7 was a large revamp, with a new user interface, visualizations and increased functionality. Windows Vista, however, dropped older versions of Windows Media Player in favor of v11, which included the removal of the Windows Media Source Filter (DirectShow codec).
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