Blimey Caroline, certainly shows persistence on your part!  So glad your
process of illimination has got the result you want.  (The Beeb may yet
reply).

Just to comment that, has it happens, I have no Vista or JFW, still using XP
pro.  I'd certainly be interested to hear if the tech gurus giving JFW support
in the UK have an answer for this cunnundrum.  the list would benefit by
hearing such an explanation.

For what it's worth, I run an external synth on both my XP machines so the
sound card never has to do double duty for speech and sound.  As you say
though you certainly wouldn't be taxing that that sound card of yours doing
what you are doing.

You wonder if, somehow, theythe drm and JFW protection scheme are responsible
for this behaviour, but the clue must lie in the fact that you can load JFW
(after) beginning to play the BBC material.  It as as if the DRM scheme is
looking to see if anything else can digitally swipe the protected material
before it'll start playing.

As a final aside to a possibly over lengthy post, the Jarte Word Processor I
use "looks" to see if a screen reader is running and if one is, then disables
features of the program that screen readers can't get along with.  (You can
defeat this inspection of course by loading the screen reader after Jart has
loaded.  Just a a possibly erronious comparison but anyway, let us know if you
get some sort of explanation and whether upgrading causes the problem to go
away.

All the best.

Ray

Caroline Ford wrote:
Ray,

I did as you suggested and, after exhausting all other possibilities, I
contacted the BBC.  I have received an acknowledgement but nothing else
after five days, which I'm quite surprised about.

I was determined not to give up on this though, so have tried all I could
possibly think of.  I have downloaded two separate codec packs, deleted the
DRM information in Vista as suggested on the BBC site and allowed Windows
Media Player to re-create it, checked that my sound card and graphics
drivers are up to date, and checked and double-checked the recommended
settings for Windows Media Player.  Absolutely nothing worked.

I then transferred the file to a PC running XP and it played perfectly first
time.  This still didn't explain why things didn't work in Vista, but at
least it indicated that the file wasn't corrupt and that WMP is capable of
playing WMV files, which I was beginning to doubt.

One final idea occurred to me this evening.  I unloaded Jaws, then tried to
play the file, and for some inexplicable reason, it started playing.  I do
not understand why as my sound card (Realtek High Definition) is more than
capable of playing more than one sound at a time, but this was finally the
solution which did the trick.

I have no idea what it is about Jaws which is blocking the playback of the
file, but have contacted the Jaws dealers in the UK to ask for an
explanation.  In the meantime, it's easy enough to unload Jaws first, and I
can even re-load it once the file is playing with no ill effects.  I just
wish I'd thought of this about a week ago!

Thanks for your interest, and this is a solution I won't forget in a hurry.
I have just received Jaws 11, so will install that and see if it suffers
from the same problem.

Caroline.




To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org

Reply via email to