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Windows Media Player

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Mr-H | 22:29 Fri 23rd Jul 2010 | Computers
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I have been uploading to my PC a number of music tracks from analogue to digital format. When I tried to play some of them (about 5-6 out of over 100 transferred) I got the message 'Windows Media Player cannot play the file. The Player might not support the file type or might not support the codec that was used to compress the file.' These files have definitely been saved as MP3 files, but I can't play them. Any ides would be welcome - what if I used something like Format Factory to 'reset' the file types to MP3?
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I've got a CD full of MP3 files (old radio comedy shows) which will play on my computer (and on an MP3 compatible CD player) but which my MP3 player won't recognise. Your problem seems to be rather similar (i.e. Windows Media Player sees the files as a 'non-standard' form of MP3).

For me, the solution has been to load the files into Audacity, and then to re-save them in MP3 format. My MP3 player then recognises the standard format used by Audacity. (It's likely that Windows Media Player will also recognise your files once they've been re-saved in this way).

If you've not already got Audacity you can download it here:
http://audacity.sourceforge.net/
(It's free and deserves a place on everyone's PC).
In order to be able to save files to MP3 format you'll also need the LAME MP3 encoder:
http://audacity.sourc...?s=install&i=lame-mp3

Chris
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Thanks for that Chris - I was actually using Audacity to transfer these files. I did use FormatFactory though, transferring the files to .wav format, then againre-transferring to MP3 - it seems to have worked! Thanks again for the help.

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