This also happens when porting into a new zone, however the effects are less extreme. This sometimes will last 5 minutes at a time. If during this stage I attempt to get on a mount I, again, turn invisible and the camera doesn’t follow when I move. Eventually my toon will “pop” up, but missing shoulders, helm, cape, weapon, etc. I only know this because I’m a lock and I can see my pet walking off into walls when I attempt to walk forward. Interestingly, I AM able to move my toon while “invisible” but my camera doesn’t follow.
Factory reset PC with fresh install of Windows AND WoW.Since returning, EVERY time I boot the game up the loading screen seems normal, but once I’m “in” I can’t see my character, other players, chats, maps, portals, and a whole lot of other textures that should be loaded. Was it the update? I wouldn’t know as I had been on hiatus for quite some time until recently. Issue: When I boot up the game or teleport to a new zone I run into a number of strange things that weren’t happening before 8.2.
Over the weekend I recorded a video testing some of the formats which I have embedded.I was browsing the forums and couldn’t find this exact issue so if this was already solved then my apologies. I will be bringing my Raspberry Pi to our user group in September if you want to have a go with it in person. If you want to watch DVD files all you need is the MPEG-2 decoder. So if you want to use a Raspberry Pi to watch Windows Media Center recordings you will need the MPEG-2 decoder but unless you want to watch WMV files you don’t need the VC-1 option. * BBC One HD recordings would load but not play correctly, Channel 4 HD worked fine. I tested the formats one at a time with a combination decoder licences installed, here are my results: I also tested WMV (Windows Media Video) files and a un-encrypted DVD file.
I used the latest version of Raspbmc and the recordings were taken from a Windows 7 machine with DVB-T2 card. I copied a few files from my Media Center system to an external hard drive (to I could rule out any network issues). So what do you get when your purchase the MPEG-2 decoder and what does the VC-1 decoder do?
Play MPEG videos in your favorite video app on your Windows 10 device.
You must do this for each image you have built for the Raspberry Pi and the code is linked to the serial number of your Raspberry Pi. The media formats supported by Elecard MPEG-2 Video Decoder Pack are MPEG-1 and MPEG-2 (video formats), and a variety of audio formats: MPEG-1 Layer I, II and III, MPEG-2, the unofficial MPEG format and LPCM.4/5.
You open the file and add the lines to the file. Note that Supported Media Formats in Media Foundation has no mention of support of MPEG-2 PS, even though MPEG-2 TS is supported but not mentioned. I still don't think MPEG-2 Video Decoder is supposed to handle your file - it would jump in in MPEG-2 ES case. The codes that the Raspberry Pi foundation email must be added to a file called config.txt which is located on the boot partition of the Pi’s SD card. With no documentation we are unaware of constraints. The MPEG-2 option costs £2.40 and the VC-1 codec costs £1.20, you buy the options from the Raspberry Pi store and then they mail you the codes. Last week the Raspberry Pi foundation announced you could purchase MPEG-2 and VC-1 decoders for the Raspberry Pi.