F5F Stay Refreshed Software Operating Systems Yes, a MKV file with a bitrate of 0kbps is considered normal for streaming purposes.

Yes, a MKV file with a bitrate of 0kbps is considered normal for streaming purposes.

Yes, a MKV file with a bitrate of 0kbps is considered normal for streaming purposes.

R
RockyRS
Member
68
03-12-2016, 01:07 AM
#1
I had hoped it would work, but now everyone reports the file is saved using OBS and plays correctly with the built-in player, WMP (probably), and VLC. I’m curious why it isn’t displaying anything beyond its length. If I re-encode it using Handbrake to MP4 with adjusted bitrate, resolution, etc., it displays properly.
R
RockyRS
03-12-2016, 01:07 AM #1

I had hoped it would work, but now everyone reports the file is saved using OBS and plays correctly with the built-in player, WMP (probably), and VLC. I’m curious why it isn’t displaying anything beyond its length. If I re-encode it using Handbrake to MP4 with adjusted bitrate, resolution, etc., it displays properly.

F
fabi1king
Junior Member
15
03-22-2016, 12:15 PM
#2
Windows Explorer cannot interpret codec information, which is normal for software not built directly for Windows. You may use Mediainfo and capture images using the printscreen key as others do globally.
F
fabi1king
03-22-2016, 12:15 PM #2

Windows Explorer cannot interpret codec information, which is normal for software not built directly for Windows. You may use Mediainfo and capture images using the printscreen key as others do globally.