The Madhatter
Registered
I have heard a lot of people complaining that there is no DivX software for Mac. I thought the same thing, but with a little searching around, I have found a solution that works every time. I yet to encounter one DivX movie that I haven't been able to play (there have been some other .avi's in goofy codecs I don't have that didn't work, but that doesn't count). Here's what I use:
DivX Player 1.0b10
FourCC (DivX code changer)
Windows Media Player 6.3 (it's installed, but I don't do anything with it)
I get a movie, check the code, if it needs changing I do it, then I open the movie in DivX Player, run DivX Doctor, and the movie appears, ready to watch. For anyone who cares, one advantage of DivX Doctor is that it creates a .mov file that makes the movie completely playable. So you can (if you have Toast Titanium) make VCD's from DivX files with no problem, as long as the movie isn't too long. It takes a while to encode, even on my G4 867, 896 RAM, but it's worth it when you can watch it on a commercial DVD player.
I'll make a package that contains all the programs I use to do this in a .sit file and you can get it from my website (the file should be small and I get okay bandwidth on port 80). It'll be up in a about an hour. The address is:
http://madhatter.resnet.tamu.edu
If the websites not up just email me at madhatter979@tamu.edu and I'll send it to you or something. I hope this helps all you who haven't had much success with movies.
DivX Player 1.0b10
FourCC (DivX code changer)
Windows Media Player 6.3 (it's installed, but I don't do anything with it)
I get a movie, check the code, if it needs changing I do it, then I open the movie in DivX Player, run DivX Doctor, and the movie appears, ready to watch. For anyone who cares, one advantage of DivX Doctor is that it creates a .mov file that makes the movie completely playable. So you can (if you have Toast Titanium) make VCD's from DivX files with no problem, as long as the movie isn't too long. It takes a while to encode, even on my G4 867, 896 RAM, but it's worth it when you can watch it on a commercial DVD player.
I'll make a package that contains all the programs I use to do this in a .sit file and you can get it from my website (the file should be small and I get okay bandwidth on port 80). It'll be up in a about an hour. The address is:
http://madhatter.resnet.tamu.edu
If the websites not up just email me at madhatter979@tamu.edu and I'll send it to you or something. I hope this helps all you who haven't had much success with movies.