Recommended Posts

Greetings, first of all i want to thank you for the amazing work you did on this program(3r1c too ofcourse)

although it had been fixed a few updates ago I somehow keep getting the "insufficient disk space" problem :<

i have 20gig free space on temp and output folders.. the problem occurs right after the program finishes to extract the mkv

any idea how i can fix it?

Greetings, first of all i want to thank you for the amazing work you did on this program(3r1c too ofcourse)

although it had been fixed a few updates ago I somehow keep getting the "insufficient disk space" problem :<

i have 20gig free space on temp and output folders.. the problem occurs right after the program finishes to extract the mkv

any idea how i can fix it?

The problem is being investigated by 3r1c.

It has something to do with what your regional settings are at under Windows.

I'm assuming you have it setup for something other than english UK/American?

Have you put a tick in the boost volume box (config tab)?

Yup. I've tried loading the resulting .avi file into VirtualDubMod with the intention of ripping the stream and boosting it with mp3gain but it doesn't recognise it.

The volume is very low when played on PC and PS3.

Yup. I've tried loading the resulting .avi file into VirtualDubMod with the intention of ripping the stream and boosting it with mp3gain but it doesn't recognise it.

The volume is very low when played on PC and PS3.

AVI?

Are you muxing to the AVI container?

Best to stick to the MPG container in the config setup. Not that it will help sound, I don't think it will, but .MPG is the most compatible container to use universally.

Worth ago anyway, I don't know if .AVI supports AC3 5.1, so your audio issues could be to do with muxing to AVI.

Is your source an MKV file?

AVI?

Are you muxing to the AVI container?

Best to stick to the MPG container in the config setup. Not that it will help sound, I don't think it will, but .MPG is the most compatible container to use universally.

Worth ago anyway, I don't know if .AVI supports AC3 5.1, so your audio issues could be to do with muxing to AVI.

Is your source an MKV file?

Yeah it's an MKV file. I'll try muxing to mpg container - I had no problems with the last one I did with mpg so maybe I shouldn't experiemnt ;)

By the way, how do I view mkv in WMP 11?

Yeah it's an MKV file. I'll try muxing to mpg container - I had no problems with the last one I did with mpg so maybe I shouldn't experiemnt ;)

By the way, how do I view mkv in WMP 11?

Install CCCP.

WMP doesn't like the MKV extension though, however it does play MPG.

After remuxing, you can actually delete the MKV file and just keep the MPG file MKV2VOB produces.

That's why 3r1c recommends you mux to MPG, not only is it best for the PS3, but it's compatible on PCs.

This is weird.

I've remuxed an mkv file to be compatible with playing on my PS3 but the only sound that plays are sound effects - no voice can be heard.

This has happened to all the mkv's I've converted...I thought they were working because I heard the intro music etc but when I've let them play for a bit, I realise no voice/speaking actually can be heard.

Install CCCP.

WMP doesn't like the MKV extension though, however it does play MPG.

After remuxing, you can actually delete the MKV file and just keep the MPG file MKV2VOB produces.

That's why 3r1c recommends you mux to MPG, not only is it best for the PS3, but it's compatible on PCs.

I've been transcoding/muxing to vob.

Which is best? Vob, or MPG?

I've been transcoding/muxing to vob.

Which is best? Vob, or MPG?

Go with MPG - Won't make a difference with 99.9% of files playing back on the PS3, but on the PC MPG files play a lot easier than VOB files do.

Newest versions of MKV2VOB default to MPG.

This is weird.

I've remuxed an mkv file to be compatible with playing on my PS3 but the only sound that plays are sound effects - no voice can be heard.

This has happened to all the mkv's I've converted...I thought they were working because I heard the intro music etc but when I've let them play for a bit, I realise no voice/speaking actually can be heard.

What version of MKV2VOB?

I'll ask 3r1c to investigate. Was it working prior to "now" or have you only just started using MKV2VOB?

I had the same error as WastedJoker at first. Then I installed CCCP figuring that a version of my software wasn't up to date or it simply wasn't there. Fixed the issue.

Is there a free way to convert .mov files as easily as this? I've tried a few applications but they're all shareware apps that watermark or do the first "x" seconds.

Hi,

Thanks for the excellent guide! (Y)

I'm trying to decide whether to buy a PS3 as a media server, and am a bit concerned with future compatibility - I'm surprised that there isn't greater support for different types of video files - do you think Sony will eventually add more codecs such as MKV natively? Do you think I should be put off, or are you confident support will continue to increase?

Anyway, I did a couple of test files using your techniques which worked brilliantly. I had a question about something in the guide:

Sets the video codec to use when transcoding. Xvid files will be split in 2GB segments as the PS3 requires - I recommend you leave this on x264 for best quality/compression.

Is this still the case, since with the latest firmware the size of Divx files are not limited in the PS3? It would seem a bit pointless for MKV2VOB to split them into 2GB segments now?

Second question is a little off-topic, but you seem to be very knowledgeable on PS3 matters - in Bluray playback, does the PS3 output native 24p? Also, does it support full multichannel audio for movies?

Lastly, what is the largest internal HDD that the PS3 supports, and with external FAT32 formatted drives is the max. partition size 32GB, in which case, can you have multiple 32GB partitions on a large external drive?

Cheers,

James :cool:

Hi,

Thanks for the excellent guide! (Y)

I'm trying to decide whether to buy a PS3 as a media server, and am a bit concerned with future compatibility - I'm surprised that there isn't greater support for different types of video files - do you think Sony will eventually add more codecs such as MKV natively? Do you think I should be put off, or are you confident support will continue to increase?

Anyway, I did a couple of test files using your techniques which worked brilliantly. I had a question about something in the guide:

Is this still the case, since with the latest firmware the size of Divx files are not limited in the PS3? It would seem a bit pointless for MKV2VOB to split them into 2GB segments now?

Second question is a little off-topic, but you seem to be very knowledgeable on PS3 matters - in Bluray playback, does the PS3 output native 24p? Also, does it support full multichannel audio for movies?

Lastly, what is the largest internal HDD that the PS3 supports, and with external FAT32 formatted drives is the max. partition size 32GB, in which case, can you have multiple 32GB partitions on a large external drive?

Cheers,

James :cool:

I don't split files via mkv2vob and they all work.

The PS3 does have the option for 24p on Blu Ray. So if the TV accepts it, you're good to go.

I've heard of people using 500GB internal drives with no problems. As for external drives, I've got 2 500GB FAT32's hooked up and any file less than 4GB works fine.

I don't split files via mkv2vob and they all work.

The PS3 does have the option for 24p on Blu Ray. So if the TV accepts it, you're good to go.

I've heard of people using 500GB internal drives with no problems. As for external drives, I've got 2 500GB FAT32's hooked up and any file less than 4GB works fine.

Thanks for that, most helpful.

Where's the option not to split the files in MKV2VOB?

I think I'll prob put a 500GB internal in and not deal with the FAT32 partition nonsense (honestly, these days FAT32's file size limits are archaic - what was Sony thinking? Any chance they could fix the disk format to something more modern with a Firmware fix?

24p support is good.

Anyone know about the PS3's multichannel audio capability for movies?

Is this still the case, since with the latest firmware the size of Divx files are not limited in the PS3? It would seem a bit pointless for MKV2VOB to split them into 2GB segments now?

Second question is a little off-topic, but you seem to be very knowledgeable on PS3 matters - in Bluray playback, does the PS3 output native 24p? Also, does it support full multichannel audio for movies?

Lastly, what is the largest internal HDD that the PS3 supports, and with external FAT32 formatted drives is the max. partition size 32GB, in which case, can you have multiple 32GB partitions on a large external drive?

Cheers,

James :cool:

The guide is a little out of date, MKV2VOB doesn't spilt divx at 2GB anymore, as Sony upped the filesize limit :)

PS3 does support 24p, yes.

I'm not sure about audio questions, I've not got a decent sound system yet :(

PS3 will support any 2.5" internal drive, so whatever drives are at nowadays. As for external, it supports any sized fat32 drive as well.

The guide is a little out of date, MKV2VOB doesn't spilt divx at 2GB anymore, as Sony upped the filesize limit :)

PS3 does support 24p, yes.

I'm not sure about audio questions, I've not got a decent sound system yet :(

PS3 will support any 2.5" internal drive, so whatever drives are at nowadays. As for external, it supports any sized fat32 drive as well.

Thanks very much - keep the thread going, this is by far the best thread on this I've found and believe me I've been through a few before I made it here!

Cheers,

James :cool:

I've remuxed an mkv file to be compatible with playing on my PS3 but the only sound that plays are sound effects - no voice can be heard.

I'm having a similiar issue with converting mkv to vob/mpg containers and all the audio effects are loud but voice audio is very low and I have to adjust my TV's equalizer to get the dialogue to a level that I can hear. Maybe it has something to do with the way the original files are ripped to MKV?

This topic is now closed to further replies.
  • Posts

    • Microsoft: Windows 11 KB5094126, KB5093998 finally stops trusting a critical system threat by Sayan Sen This week Microsoft released the Patch Tuesday updates for June 2026 with KB5094126 on Windows 11 25H2, 24H2, and KB5093998 on Windows 11 23H2. On Windows 10 22H2 it's under KB5094127. Alongside the announced release notes for the new builds, Microsoft has revealed another change that is coming to Windows with these new releases. It has been confirmed that custom folders are getting a significant change with the June 2026 updates as such folders or folder names defined by desktop.ini will no longer appear after this update is successfully installed. While you may inititally think this is a bug with the new release, Microsoft has stated that this is in fact "expected behaviour" in its new support article regarding this which Neowin spotted today while browsing. Essentially it's a security hardening measure such that custom folder presentations are treated as potentially unsafe whenever Windows is not sure about their origin and whether that desktop.ini folder can be trusted or not. Here is list of such untrusted files and folders: Files downloaded from the internet that carry Mark-of-the-Web (MOTW). Files copied from certain remote locations, such as some WebDAV or HTTP-based locations. Files on network paths that are not classified as intranet or trusted by zone policy. For those who may not be familiar, Desktop.ini is a special configuration file used by Windows to customize the appearance and behavior of individual folders. Basically Windows can read specific instructions stored in Desktop.ini instead of displaying every folder with the same default settings. This can be used to apply custom icons, thumbnail images, localized folder names, and such informational tooltips (infotip). The file can also influence certain folder-specific behaviors and properties. It is typically stored as a hidden system file within a folder that has been designated to support Desktop.ini customization. However, because Windows Shell automatically reads and applies these attributes whenever a customized folder is opened, they have historically (since the Windows XP days) presented an attack surface as a result of an unchecked buffer in the Shell component responsible for extracting custom attributes from Desktop.ini files. As such an attacker could create a specially crafted Desktop.ini containing a malicious or corrupted attributes and place it on a network share. So if a user were to browse that folder, Windows would automatically process the file, potentially triggering a buffer overflow. This could allow arbitrary code to run with the same permissions as the logged-in user. Hence a seemingly harmless folder could become a security risk when their contents are not properly validated. For admins and users alike looking to manage this behaviour, Microsoft has shared a few ways. One of them is to assign a trusted mark on the folder in case you are sure of its source. Secondly a policy can be used to revert back to the previous state. Finally, the MOTW can be removed too to indicate to Windows that this is a safe file. The company explains: Option 1: Add the source to Trusted Sites (Recommended) If the affected content is stored on a known internal or managed source, add that source to the Trusted Sites list. Once the source is treated as trusted, Windows processes desktop.ini from that source normally. This keeps the protection in place for other locations and is the lower-risk option. Option 2: Use policy to restore previous behavior Organizations that need broader compatibility can enable the policy Allow the use of remote paths in file shortcut icons.Enabling this policy restores the pre-June 2026 behavior for affected remote or untrusted scenarios. Option 3: Check for and remove the Mark of the Web (MotW) If the desktop.ini file has a Mark of the Web (MotW), Windows may treat it as coming from an untrusted source and block customization. Verify whether MotW is present and, if appropriate, remove it from the desktop.ini file. This can restore expected behavior, but should only be done for trusted content, as it removes the associated security protection. To remove the MotW tag, open PowerShell and run one of the following commands: For a single desktop.ini file: Unblock-File "C:\Your\Folder\Path\desktop.ini" For all desktop.ini files in a folder: Get-ChildItem "C:\Your\Folder\Path" -Recurse -Filter desktop.ini -Force | Unblock-File Microsoft has warned though against using a broad opt-out using the provided policy as it reduces protection against potentially malicious remote folder-customization content. As such the tech giant recommends trusting only controlled internal sources and keeping trust settings as strict as possible. You can check out the official support article here on Microsoft's website.
    • LAV Filters 0.82.0 by Razvan Serea LAVFSplitter is a multi-format media splitter that uses libavformat (the demuxing library from ffmpeg) to demux all sorts of media files. LAV Splitter is a Souce Filter/Splitter required to demux the files into their separate elementary streams. LAV Audio and Video Decoder are powerful decoders with a focus on quality and performance, without any compromises. Supported Formats: MKV/WebM, AVI, MP4/MOV, MPEG-TS/PS (including basic EVO support), FLV, OGG, and many more that are supported by ffmpeg! LAV Filters are based on ffmpeg and libbluray and is aimed to offer a all-around solution to perfect playback of file-based Media as well as Blu-rays. LAV Filters 0.82.0 changelog: LAV Splitter NEW: Support for demuxing Dolby Vision Enhancement Layer streams NEW: Support for Animated WebP images Changed: When demuxing Blu-ray discs, Dolby Vision metadata is available on the primary video stream LAV Video NEW: Support for Animated WebP images Changed: Hardware decoding support for DVDs has been removed Download: LAV Filters 0.82.0 | 15.5 MB (Open Source) View: LAV Filters Website | Screenshot Get alerted to all of our Software updates on Twitter at @NeowinSoftware
    • For some reason when EU forced Microsoft to allow users to change the default browser and search provider in Windows (also no ads for Office and the likes) - it was good. But when it comes to Apple - then it's bad. BTW, Apple would have gone out of business if Microsoft wasn't pressed by US government several decades ago. 😉
  • Recent Achievements

    • One Month Later
      Sopa flores earned a badge
      One Month Later
    • First Post
      StaticMatrix earned a badge
      First Post
    • Week One Done
      StaticMatrix earned a badge
      Week One Done
    • Rookie
      lamborghiniv10 went up a rank
      Rookie
    • One Month Later
      pinnclepd earned a badge
      One Month Later
  • Popular Contributors

    1. 1
      +primortal
      506
    2. 2
      PsYcHoKiLLa
      207
    3. 3
      +Edouard
      156
    4. 4
      Steven P.
      88
    5. 5
      ATLien_0
      79
  • Tell a friend

    Love Neowin? Tell a friend!