
I cannot help but feel we have the makings of what Polonus refers to as very elaborate moves in the browser positioning chess-game, and I wonder how it is that commercial parties would be able to play with the title html 5 when html as a concept is surely inseparable from web services administered through W3C.īut then I’m mostly at user application layer and, while don’t have time to watch too much video through my browser, I do tend to get what I want with anything I can pull down to my desktop.Īnd on the wider scheme of things, on the small amount I’ve read so far, it will be interesting to watch this codec and no codec situation play out over the next year. Seems like Firefox didn’t come to party, and Google have always been ready to tempt fate especially when it might put them in an untouchable category. And obviously in this case there is something going on. Nonetheless I find ways around doing things even if I am a bit lost that there may be other things going on in layers beneath.


I’m primarily engaging with software at user application layer so I’m a bit unknowing as to what else is happening underneath the browser (say, at session layer). Same thing using Format Factory to convert to wmv and all good. wmv using Leawo and when I try and play with media player 11 and all good. I convert firefox download of mpeg 4 file to. Then download through google service and media player 11 won’t play video of downloaded mpeg 4 file. In the IE Tab preferences inside Firefox, set YouTube to always open inside an IE Tab (see image below). Next go to Firefox (other computer) and try same thing.
Now play the download using Windows Media Player 11.
#YOUTUBE HTML5 VIDEO PLAYER FOR FIREFOX MP4#
But currently on Chrome and download 'when the levee breaks' as mp4 through google download service.
