
- #LEAWO BLU RAY PLAYER WONT PLAY MOVIE#
- #LEAWO BLU RAY PLAYER WONT PLAY 64 BIT#
- #LEAWO BLU RAY PLAYER WONT PLAY UPDATE#
- #LEAWO BLU RAY PLAYER WONT PLAY ISO#
My video card is HDMI 2.0 compliant, and you need HDMI 2.0a at a minimum for HDR AFAIK. It's possibly a bug in VLC I am looking for a workaround. There is talk on the VLC forums about this.
#LEAWO BLU RAY PLAYER WONT PLAY 64 BIT#
Even though Java is installed on my machine, and the environment variable JAVA_HOME is correctly set to the \bin location of Java, why does VLC tell me "The menu for this disc uses Java and Java is not found" - I tried 32 bit VLC with 32 bit Java and 64 bit VLC with 64 bit Java, changing the JAVA_HOME value as appropriate of course, and it made no difference.Why will VLC play some 4k Blu-Ray movies from the disc, but not play others from the disc but WILL play them from an.I currently have three issues I am working to resolve:
#LEAWO BLU RAY PLAYER WONT PLAY MOVIE#
The Movie Nazis made LG put code in later versions of that firmware that would prevent the drive from doing ANYTHING with an encrypted 4K Blu-Ray. This (older) firmware is what makes the drive "friendly" - the drive can read the encrypted data off the disc, and then AnyDVD can de-crypt it. You are 100% correct, I certainly will NOT be changing that firmware! No no no. However, if the 4K movie you are viewing and trying to see is of a nature film where your following the migration of penguins and how they give birth, then your computer will not need to process all those extra special EFX because there will not be much EFX in a nature film as opposed to an action film. If your movie has a lot of action sequences where things are being blown up and people are dying that takes a lot of processing power for a computer to decompile, send it to the video card and have the video memory and card send its output to the monitor or to your 4K TV. If your graphics card is integrated onto your motherboard with little or no G-RAM or separate GPU processor to help relieve the main CPU's processing of the 4K movie playback, you are going to have an even more choppy playback than you did when you were allowing solely on the Blu-Ray player to process the playback of your 4k movie.
#LEAWO BLU RAY PLAYER WONT PLAY ISO#
Second, ripping an ISO of your 4K disc is fine, however, now you are relying on your computer's CPU to not only process your video output but now playing your movie from an ISO file you're asking your computer to computer to decompile and play your movie as well. Maybe you will have better luck with no errors. Try playing your Blu-Ray again this time using the MPC player and your Blu-Ray drive. I am merely suggesting that you stated you had issues playing back your 4K movie, and with the CODEC MEGA package installed you can tweak these CODECs to work with your system while playing back your movie via MPC which uses EXTERNAL CODECs rather than relying only on VLCs INTERNAL only CODECs. I am not saying you cannot use VLC to playback your movie. VideoLAN (VLC) usually uses its own internal CODECs, however, you stated that you had issues during playback, so why not try using MPC (Media Player) which is included within the MEGA package that you can download from the CODEC Guide. Next, goto CODEC Guide's website and download the latest MEGA package for the latest video drivers.
#LEAWO BLU RAY PLAYER WONT PLAY UPDATE#
Since I am not a mind reader.here are some questions to ponder:ĭo you have the LATEST firmware update for your current Blu-Ray player installed to your drive? (Check LG's site - you stated that you have old firmware.) Depending upon how old your drive is there may not be any.ĭoes your "built-in" monitor of your notebook support 4K display?ĭoes your TV/Monitor support 4K viewing (I am thinking yes, is the correct answer for the first part of this question) ***AND*** do you have an HDMI cable that supports 4K output ***AND*** does your HDMI output video card port SUPPORT 4K output? However, will your computer handle it is the question? What is your computer specs, first off? According to 's website the VLC player has internal CODECs and will play everything out there today, inclusively including 4K video without any extra wants or warrants.
