![]() From all I can see, it's an NVidia driver issue. This does not happen on my development PC (Windows 8.1), though, and it's a very weird behaviour. I hope my journey goes someway to helping.Ok, after upgrading my HTPC to Windows 10 and plugging an NVidia GPU in, I can reproduce the problems you guys reported with starting playback in non-FSE fullscreen mode. No glitches, no stutter, no crashing, no buffering, no drop out. You need to place each individual mkv file into it's own individual folder. All audio formats accept DTS will play perfectly. In summary, full UHD mkv rips will play perfectly in HDR on an xbox one through the Movies and TV player app via USB. Now, through this setup everything plays at fantastic quality, both video and audio. Each file took about 7 minutes and 5.1 is perfectly acceptable for my tvs speaker system. I simply converted the DTS to Dolby 5.1 E-AC3, leaving the video untouched and creating a new mkv file. ![]() ![]() I got around this by running the DTS only files through Xmedia Recode which is a piece of freeware I picked up. The only thing it can't handle is DTS True HD, but I expected that to be honest. HDR is triggered every single time and audio played brilliantly. I then attached my hdd to my pc and placed each movie file into its own individual folder rather than having them all in one master folder. Something I noticed from using a pc is that single folders populated with huge individual files are difficult for Microsoft to handle. However, the app then crashed after 3 minutes. The drive was recognised, the files were made available and as soon as I pressed play, Hdr triggered on the TV. Someone mentioned another xbox app called Movies and TV player. Not one to give up easily, I continued my research and stumbled on a post from another AV forum in the states. I then tried VLC and worse again, the app just crashed upon playback. Hdr was not triggered so image was terrible. Video displayed incorrectly and colours were off, washed out. ![]() Again, all files were made available but this was even worse. Atmos, True HD and DTS codecs failed to work, these files only offered video with no audio. The picture played for every file but only sound played for files using an AC3 or EAC3 codec. The drive was recognised and through the built in media player, the files appeared. My second attempt was using the USB port on my son's xbox on. No joy at all as my hdd is not formatted to Fat32. My first attempt was connecting the hdd to the USB port of the TV. All of them are large files which I wanted to playback directly on the TV via usb as I have no interest in plex etc. I ripped all of my bluray and uhd blurays using make mkv. My situation means that I do not have the space for a full AV sound system so I rely on the inbuilt speakers which, I must add, are superb in conjunction with my Cambridge Audio Minx sub. You must use the MP4.4K.DolbyVision.H265.10Bit profile in DVDFab for DV content, if you have a PC with a recent GPU it can use hardware transcoding which should speed up the process a lotĬommon settings->AV Codec->Lightning Shrink enabled.ĭo regular 4K HDR10 from MakeMKV work via USB if no try dropping the MKV file into TS-Muxer select output as TS muxing and generate the file, see if that works.įrom my experience over the past few weeks and with a ton of help from other forum members, I have discovered that the following works very well for blu ray and UHD 4k mkv playback on my jz2000. If 4k DV video from MakeMKV doesn't work then its likely the video needs to be processed through a video converter.ĭolby Vision is also a closed standard with multiple profiles so not all DV is the same and some DV players can handle DV but with limitations.įor DV via USB on the JZ2000 you probably need to use DVDFab converter, this basically hacks together a compatible DV version of the video in mp4 container. I don't own a Panasonic so I'm not sure what its capable of playing via USB when it comes to HDR, the manual doesn't say much other than video/audio codecs supported. Plex requires a media server, the Nvidia Shield is somewhat unique in that it can run the Plex server on the device alongside the client, so the shield plus USB HDD can be a fully contained Plex system, there is an easy to follow video tutorial here. The internal video player of Xbox can activate HDR but a third party software media player cannot unless it uses the internal video player but then its really only a skin over the internal video player. Click to expand.Xbox is a closed system, apps on the consoles don't have full access to the OS.
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