sknis, on 24 September 2010 - 02:29 PM, said:
I'm not convinced that you will be able to play an AVCHD ISO with an emulated drive. I have not been able to do so. I tried today.
Skinis, thanks for your help and effort in trying to find this problem..
I figured it out!
Like I said at the top of this thread, I thought I used Cineplayer in a test on this PC, but after it failed to work this time, I thought maybe it it was my imagination, and that maybe I had seen cineplayer's screen in an online video or something......
But I started thinking what I had changed here in this PC recently...turns out a couple of days ago I swapped the older DVI monitor cable for a brand new HDMI, this monitor came equipped with old VGA only and I was using my other PC's DVI cable in the meantime..
I just snapped the old DVI cable back and Cineplayer works fine now..this HDMI's cable specs claims to be
'fully' HDCP compliant, (AFAIK older DVI is not fully compliant) so I think since AVCHD is associated with Blu-Ray, win7 might be reporting the disc as Blu-RAY and Cineplayer is asking for the Blu-ray software plug-in for 'handshake' purposes as required by HDCP...
Or maybe the HDMI cable is not really compliant..

but in this case I would think lots of people would be complaining to the online seller about not been able to play regular retail Blu-ray discs in their PCs with their cables.. in any case I'm going to double check with the seller......
This stuff could drive someone nuts!
Edit: I double checked, and my new HDMI cables are fully HDCP compliant, which means if you use HDMI cable to your monitor and win7 then you need the Blu-ray plug-in to use cineplayer, or use a DVI cable if you can instead...
From seller's page..
Question: What is HDCP and are these cables HDCP compliant?
Answer: HDCP stands for High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection. It is a digital rights management technology used by content providers such as movie studios to protect their media property from being illegally distributed.
"Since HDCP is a requirement of the HDMI format, all HDMI cables are HDCP capable by default."
Edited by mackado, 24 September 2010 - 08:17 PM.