How to Install a New Codec in Windows Media Player

Many media codecs are included in Windows Vista, but as technology changes daily, it is important to know how to install new codecs for the Windows Media Player. Codecs are important in the Windows Media Player world because you need a codec to translate different kinds of media files into data that WMP can understand.

A codec (short for coder-decoder or compressor-decompressor) is a small program that converts data from one form to another.

Unfortunately, filename extensions don’t tell the whole codec story. For example, WMA files can have a WMA 7, WMA 9.2 or WMA 10 format. It’s up to Windows Media Player (or Winamp, which also plays WMA files) to look inside the file and decide which format was used to create the file. After the determination has been made, WMP (or Winamp) hauls in the right codec to decipher the file. You don’t need to lift a finger.

Sometimes, though, Windows Media Player doesn’t have the correct codec on hand to play a particular file. For example, AVI is a popular file format that can be created using a particular kind of video-encoding technique called DivX. Although DivX files are gaining in popularity, Windows Media Player still doesn't include its codec. So, in order to play a file using this format, you need to install a new codec.

1

Double-click a video or audio file.

When you try to play a media file that WMP doesn’t understand, WMP helps you find the codec. In this case, WMP can’t find the codec necessary to play The Cabinet of Dr Caligari_xvid-belos.avi, so it shows this message.

2

Click the Web Help button.

Windows Media Player fires up Internet Explorer (or your default Internet browser) and connects to a Web site that specifically identifies the missing codec. It needs the Xvid MPEG-4 (Xvid) codec.

3

Click the WMPlugins link.

The WMPlugins Web site — which is owned by Microsoft — gives you a link to the Xvid codec.

4

Click the link to the codec download site.

In this case, we click the Xvid Codec Download Site link to find the missing codec. Microsoft shows a disclaimer that Microsoft is helping you leave a Microsoft site and that the site you’re going to — the one with the codec — isn’t associated with Microsoft.

5

Click I Accept.

WMPlugins transports you to the download site.

6

Click the link to download the codec.

Internet Explorer goes through the usual file download routine.

7

When the download is done, click the Run button.

You may have to click through some scary-looking dialog boxes saying that the publisher couldn’t be verified and allowing the installer to run. Eventually, you get to the codec’s setup wizard or something similar.

8

Follow the installer’s instructions.

If it tells you to close all other applications, click the red X to exit the umpteen Internet Explorer windows.

9

Go back to Windows Media Player and click the Close button on the original codec notice, and then click the red X to exit Windows Media Player.

Ultimately, the codec is installed.

10

If you closed Windows Media Player, double-click the video or audio file again.

This time, The Cabinet of Dr Caligari_xvid-belos.avi plays like a champ.

Comments (3)

  1. Posted by Karen Winter
    I am actually having problems viewing a movie on my Windows Media player. The cound is fine but no picture. I got excited when I received your newest dummies daily concerning a fix, but when I clicked on the link. I got ehe mwssage below: WMPlugins.comMicrosoft has retired WMPlugins.com. Thank you to all of our Windows Media Player partners and customers who submitted plug-ins over the years to help give users a richer media experience. Recommended places to find similar content
  2. Posted by O. Balfour
    I tried over this past weekend to go to the site that Windows recommends for the codec problem and I got the same message that Karen got about them "retiring WMPlugins.com". What does this mean for people that are still having the codec issue?
  3. Posted by 4ndyman
    First of all, make sure you have the most recent version of WMP. You want WMP 11 for Vista and earlier -- WMP 12 is built around Win7.
    Second, did you follow the Codec link on that page? You can find some ideas on how to find the codec you need and get it working there.
    Third, if you're looking specifically for the DivX codec, look here: http://www.divxmovies.com/codec/
    Regardless, it looks like this article needs to be updated.

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