solutions watch

hacks, fixes, updates, and news

        

Hack Allows Xbox 360 Owners to Stream DivX Video in Real-Time

Posted in All, Technology, Mods by digg on the January 17th, 2006

Very cool. Casey at Brains-N-Brawn has figured out a way to stream DivX video to the Xbox 360 using Windows Media Endcoder (via HD Beat). This is great news for all us lazy people who would otherwise need a program like Videora Xbox360 Converter to manually transcode each video into Xbox compatible WMV

read more | digg story

One Response to 'Hack Allows Xbox 360 Owners to Stream DivX Video in Real-Time'

Subscribe to comments with RSS or TrackBack to 'Hack Allows Xbox 360 Owners to Stream DivX Video in Real-Time'.


  1. on January 18th, 2006 at 11:09 pm

    […] Now it was time to use this machine for what I bought it for so I recorded something on standard cable. It was a 2 hour movie on cable. I then tried to save to dvd. I got an error saying there wasn’t enough room on the dvd. I checked the file size and it was 6.50 GB for 2 hours of tv, not even in HD. One of the reason it wasn’t in HD is because WMC doesn’t support it well it technically supports HD but the cable company has to install a smart card to decode the HD channels they are broadcasting. In some areas the local (ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX) channels are broadcasted in HD but you have to have a HD tuner and I fairly certain dell doesn’t sale or they didn’t at the time any HD tv cards. Anyway since I couldn’t fit the 2 hour show on a dvd I started looking around to see what the deal was, if I was trying save the wrong file or something. It turns out that WMC saves recorded tv in its own drv-ms file format, which seems to have a very bad compression ratio. Own meaing Microsoft’s own file format.  To actually get the data WMC saves into a format that can fit onto a dvd and play in your home dvd player you have to use some third party software. Here is a link I found discussing that. If it were not for the capability to this. Then next time I will do this. […]