They tie you to your TV at home. It limit your devices to play different formats of files.
Once you finish downloading the torrent file you must open the containing file of the folders. Inside their should be a movie file, such as AVI, Xvid, or other type of video file. In that case all you have to do is double click and watch. Some movie files require you to download plugins to play. ------------ Remember that you need a Bittorrent client to download .torrent format files. One of the best programs for that cause would be Utorrent, which can be downloaded for free from here: www.utorrent.com/download.php
It depends on the format the file is posted in. Uncompressed VOB (direct DVD rips) will be the largest files (approximately 4gb) and avi will be the smallest (approx 700mb)
God made the world in 6 days. On the seventh he made VirtualDub.
The main advantage is that they allow you to transport files easily between computers. they are small and light and easy to carry around The main disadvantage is that if they are stolen, sensitive files can be easily accessed.
.SRT files are the files for subtitles when a DVD is burned to computer
You can convert your SRT files using this site http://arabic-subtitles-fix.com This site converts Arabic SRT files to another 2 types of SRT files 1. UTF8 Files which displays fine in all PC/MAC players. 2. Visual SRT file which will play fine in any streamer / hd player you have. It also fixes the unconnected letters in Arabic.
VLC
download Minilyrics and *DivXl and Media subtitlar * then play your song on windows media player, you will see a folder named lyrics in C: open it you will see .lrc file , then open your DivXl and open .lrc and save it to .SRT...done
Trying googling the name of the movie in French or English followed by the words "French subtitles" (or Hindi). It should return a list of sites offering such subtitles. Many are spam, but there's a few safe ones. Try "French .srt subtitles" to exclude file formats such as ".sub", or try "sous-titres français" if "French subtitles" does not return any hit. Once you have the .srt file, copy it into the same folder where you have the movie file, with the exact same name as the movie file, except for the ".srt" file extension (instead of .avi/.mkv/.mp4 for the movie itself.) If you play the movie with a media player such as VLC, the subtitles will load automatically if they have the same file name. Or you can load the subtitles file from the player's menu. If your movie is in DVD format, you'll need to rip and convert it first. .srt files are small text file, so it's easy to check the content in Notepad. .sub files are subtitles in graphic format, the format used in DVDs, so they are much bigger and almost no players support them.
Not directly, but it can contain movie files (e.g. mp4, mpeg, avi) that your computer can play.
Most can't.
You can't play video files created on WMM v2.6 on the earlier version 2.1 of Windows Movie Maker (XP).
There are a few free movie player programs that can play AVI files. The most popular are those that can be found at the websites for DivX and Free AVI Player.
Certain sites (I'm not sure where exactly) will provide the subtitle files (usually in SRT/SubRip) format, and other locations that provide the content can also embed SRT or SSA/Advanced SSA subtitles in Matroska video/audio container files (file extension .mkv. Not to be confused as a format!)
Still searching. VLC does not play moviexplayer encoded files. Nor does Media Player Classic.
Yes! When you've started the video you wanna see, simply drag and drop the .srt file to VLC window. Or right click with your mouse in window and choose subtitles and open file (choose the .srt file)