Download and install the following programs if you are having problems playing videos. You can just install everything if you don't know what you need.
Get QuickTime (win) | Get QuickTime (mac)
Sites that use the DivX format will require you to have a DivX player installed. You can download and install a free Windows version. A mac version is also available.
Note: The DivX program is known to be very CPU intensive, so depending on the speed of your computer, you may need to close any extra browser windows that you don't need in order to have enough computer power to run it.
Certain videos (not all) that come from veoh will need their player if you want to view more than the first 5 minutes. You will get a warning message about it being limited to 5 minutes when you come across one of them. You can register for a free account and download their free player to view the rest of a movie.
Here is an alternate way of watching RM files without having to install the Real Media player, which can be slow and bulky to load. Download Real Alternative. This tool will play video using a light-weight player you probably already have on your system, like Media Player Classic.
Many videos, such as those on YouTube, are streamed through a Flash player, so you need to have the latest version of Macromedia Flash installed on your computer. To download it, please visit Adobe.
Apple QuickTime is required to view certain videos. If you don't have QuickTime installed on your computer, click on the icon, left, to get QuickTime free.
You can view the videos either by playing them directly from the site or by downloading them first and then playing them. When you play a video directly, your Web browser will open a page with a video player and begin to cache the video. You can then play the video but the video will not be saved on your hard drive (not easily found) and cannot be played again later without reloading the page. When you download and play a video, you can sometimes save the video to your hard drive and after it is completely downloaded you just need to locate the video on your hard drive and can then play the video any time you like.
If a video is starting and stopping often, or just says buffering without starting, you can press the pause button and wait a few minutes for things to get caught up (if the connection is very poor you may need to wait an hour or more). After waiting you can then press play again and things should stream smoothly.
Real Player has a free plug-in that will let you save just about any streaming video into a format that can be viewed later in their player.
Many sites will embed the videos into the website your are viewing. These cannot be directly saved. However, there are software tools available that may allow you to download them for later viewing. You can then burn them to a DVD for playback on an external device, like a DVD player. VideoDownloader is a free online service that will allow you to download a link from YouTube and other videos sites.
Slymko will let you download videos from many popular sites, such as YouTube, Google Video, Tudou, 56.com, Megavideo, Dailymotion, Guba, MySpace, iFilm, Gofish, Blip.tv, Break.com, Metacafe and Veoh.
Once you have downloaded a video, converting it to a DVD in a format that will play on a standard DVD player requires converting the file to a special format that DVD players can recognize. Your first step will be to convert the file to a standard initial format, like .AVI. Using a service like VideoDownloader will save an online video file in .FLV format, but you will still need a program that can convert it to .AVI. There are many free FLV players, but that will only allow you to watch the video on your computer. You can do a search on the Google to find free utilities that will convert a FLV file to AVI format.
Once you have the videos in .AVI format, you can use Nero StartSmart, dvdSanta, or some other DVD video burning program to burn these videos onto a DVD so you can watch them on any standard DVD player. Here is a link with more information on creating a DVD from an AVI file using free tools. While the free approach works, most people will find it much easier to buy a commercial tool, like Nero StartSmart. Another solution is to get a DVD player that plays mpeg-4 files (Magnasonic DVD6118-4 does this and costs about $20), so you can just burn the .AVI file directly to a dvd-rw disk and play it on a TV immediately after you burn it.
Another approach is to connect your computer to a TV and just watch them directly skipping the DVD entirely (see below).
VideoHelp.com is a good source for finding answers to your video conversion questions.
Tired of watching stuff on your small computer screen? Several companies now have relatively cheap hardware cards that allow you to play video from your computer on a regular TV. You can also connect your video output to an LCD video projector and get the full movie experience. You can search for them on Google.
http://www.adobe.com/downloads/
BusinessOfVideo - Video blog covering media distribution, advertising, television, marketing, etc. Great site to stay on top of the latest happenings in online video.
Internet Video Magazine - The best site on the web for learning how to create and post your own internet video masterpieces.
VideoMaker - Information on video production hardware, directing, and filming techniques.
VideoHelp - Learn about all the different video formats and ways of converting between them.
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