Press SUBTITLE during playback.
Press X/x, and ENTER during displaying the subtitle information.
To stop playback
Press x.
zHint
If the number of viewing times is preset, you can play the DivX video files as many times as the preset number. The following occurrences are counted:
–when the player is turned off. This includes when the player is automatically turned off by the Auto Power Off function. Press X instead of x to stop viewing.
–when the disc lid is opened.
–when another file is played.
Note
The slow reverse function is prohibited.
About DivX Video Files
DivX® is a video file compression technology, developed by DivX, Inc. This product is an official DivX® Certified product.
You can play DATA CDs and DATA DVDs that contain DivX video files.
DATA CDs and DATA DVDs thatThis player only plays DATA CDs whose | Enjoying | |
the player can play |
| |
logical format is ISO 9660 Level 1 or Joliet, | DivX | |
| ||
and DATA DVDs of Universal Disk Format | ® | |
(UDF). | ||
Videos | ||
Refer to the instructions supplied with the | ||
| ||
disc drives and the recording software (not |
| |
supplied) for details on the recording format. |
|
Note
The player may not be able to play some DATA CDs/DATA DVDs created in the Packet Write format or multiple sessions.
DivX video files that the player can playThe player can play data that is recorded in DivX format, and which has the extension “.AVI,” or “.DIVX.” The player will not play files with the extension “.AVI” or “.DIVX” if they do not contain a DivX video.
Notes
•The player may not play a DivX video file when the file consists of two or more DivX video files combined.
•The player cannot play a DivX video file of size more than 720 (width) ⋅ 576 (height)/2 GB.
•Depending on the DivX video file, the picture may be unclear or the sound may skip.
•The player cannot play some DivX video files that are longer than 3 hours.
•The player can display a file name up to 14 characters. Any characters after the 14th character do not appear on the screen.
•Characters that are not displayable appear as “*.”
•Depending on the disc, a file name that is not displayable appears as “*.”
•You cannot display correctly the
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