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Media player modules in other type apps (Word, PPT, Acrobat PDF, etc)Ĥ. Putting it another way: There are a variety of "players".ģ. So my question is is that normal? I had assumed because wav is one of the three basic audio formats that can play through HTML5, along with mp3 and ogg, that, because I can right-click on an mp3 or ogg and play them through Firefox, I should be able to do the same with a wav. But if I right-click on a wav file and select open with Firefox, it'll either start playing through a plugin or Firefox will ask me what to do with it. #GREASEMONKEY PALE MOON MP4#If I right-click on an mp4 on my desktop and select open with Firefox, it'll just start playing. #GREASEMONKEY PALE MOON CODE#I didn't know it was just the code to open the native player. I had just assumed HTML5 was Firefox's native player. Scott I think the problem is I confused everyone with the thread title. If it is still wrong, your system is likely messed up and needs uninstalling/reinstalling (maybe browser, maybe OS). If you have and it still is acting wrongly, remove QT and retweak. If you haven't tweaked your mime application associations, do so. Modern FF versions, using html5, fully supports wav directly. Isn't that page just a repeat of what I suggested? I tried resetting the mime type actions before by deleting mimetypes.rdf but it didn't work. If I select Options in Firefox, then Applications, then type wav in the search field, I get Content Type: WAV (audio/wav) Action: Use VLC Web Plugin (in Firefox), Content Type: WAV (audio/x-wav) Action: Use VLC Web Plugin (in Firefox), Content Type: WAV (unknown/unknown) Action: Always ask. Never thought before that the encoding really mattered. As I said in an earlier post, I just thought a wav was a wav was a wav. #GREASEMONKEY PALE MOON 32 BIT#I don't even know what 32 bit float means. I haven't been converting to 32 bit float deliberately. Then I tried it in Maxthon Cloud Browser and that did open it in HTML5.Īs for what I've been using to convert, pretty much anything that can convert to wav. I tried that sample you posted in both Firefox and Pale Moon, both with extensions and plugins disabled, and, unfortunately, both browsers asked me how I wanted to open the file instead of opening it for me. Is that really how it's supposed to sound? Sorry for taking so long to get back on this. Until you work it out, here's a 16 bit version courtesy of foobar2000. What are you using to convert the audio? It's not that 32 bit float is bad but most audio conversion programs would default to outputting 16 bit wave as the "finished" output. Is that really how it's supposed to sound? There's always a chance I moved it with Menu Wizard, although I don't think I did. There's a "restart with add-ons disabled" menu under Help. You could always try restarting Firefox without any add-ons and testing again. #GREASEMONKEY PALE MOON WINDOWS#The only ones related to playing video or audio are the obligatory Flash plugin and the standard Windows Media plugin, but that's it for me as far as multimedia plugins go. I've got 39 add-ons installed, but that's because I don't want to use a browser that's mean and lean and as featureless as IE6 with tabs. #GREASEMONKEY PALE MOON DOWNLOAD#I don't know anything about HTML5 but when I click on your link Pale Moon wants to download the wave file rather than open it. RealPlayer(tm) G2 LiveConnect-Enabled Plug-In (32-bit)Īll my extensions are enabled. Primetime Content Decryption Module provided by Adobe Systems, Incorporated OpenH264 Video Codec provided by Cisco Systems, Inc. Unhide Passwords (enables you to type in passwords that you can see rather than little dots) ReloadEvery (when enabled, forces a page reload every set number of seconds or minutes) Media Loop (adds a loop command to the menu that appears when you right-click an MP4/OGV/WebM in Firefox) InlineDisposition (forces a browser to open compatible file types rather than asking the user what to do with them) Here's a list off all my extensions/plugins.įlashGot (enables downloads of videos from web pages) When I click to try it, it plays as it should, in the HTML5 player. I have Seamonkey, and the page below works for me: ![]() Possibly /probably because your Firefox setup has TOO MANY plug-ins and add-ons. ![]()
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