Kinoma 4 ex patch




















Messages: 18, Likes Received: 15, Trophy Points: Kinoma 4EX is TrialPay. Thanks, nullZer0! Ahh, sorry, I should have been more clear. I was only referring to the regular version, not the EX version. I've been scouting around for another mp3 player for my TX and I ran across this today. I think I saw a saw a program for internet radio that I planned to check out. Basically, I've had my TX for awhile now but not done much with it other than keep appointments in it and some random music on a 2g sd card.

Now I'm looking to add some excitement so to speak. Things I'm looking into are a new mp3 player as if you hadn't guessed , new browser, some games, and just the cool odds and ends you find for palm. Glad to be here btw, these forums have already been a great use! Messages: 5, Likes Received: Trophy Points: No fancy interface, only excellent sound. Another one is DioPlayer.

Radio Mundu streams mp3 radio stations. Messages: 14, Likes Received: 7, Trophy Points: Another nice feature is the pre-set encoding profiles. It can even encode in Windows Media 9 format for Windows Mobile devices. If you want to tweak the settings a bit, you can choose between MPEG-4 and Windows Media 9 file formats, select audio and video codecs, adjust the bit rates, video frame rate, video frame size, and audio sample rate to get just the result you want. And once you've found the settings you like, you can save it as a custom preset to use again.

I could just click and drag several of my various video files into Producer start encoding. Every file I encoded played nicely on my Zodiac using KinomaPplayer.

The encoding was quick, generally about min per hour of video on a Pentium 4 2 GHz machine. The file sizes were very manageable, also. You can see by the screenshots what the default profile was for my device. The only changes I made to the default was the screen layout, which defaulted to by pixel, and I changed the audio channels to stereo after experimenting to take advantage of the Zodiac's Yamaha stereo chip. Kinoma Player is not just for video, even though that is what it is most well known for.

It also has an audio player, picture viewer,and plays streaming media. The player has many strengths, as well as a couple of weaknesses. Video: Thanks to Kinoma Producer, playing videos with the player is easy. Converted videos can be simply dropped into the Kinoma folder on your SD card.

It wasn't bad, and simply pausing and restarting the video straightened it out, but that should be something they can nail down. It seemed worse if I zoomed the video to full screen. The second issue, and this may be nitpicky on my part, is that fullscreen mode is not actually fullscreen.

There is always a thin white border around the screen, and the right side retains the menu icons on my Zodiac even in fullscreen mode.

When in fullscreen, the title bar and icons below are not shown, but my screenshot app would always bring them up just before it took the screenshot. The only thing you would see is the vertical icon bar on the right. As you can see by the icons on the bottom left, there is a fullscreen feature, a Zoom, and a rotate option.

Overall I found the player to be very good, and stable. Audio: The audio player is a no frills one with basic playback, album art, and screen blanking to extend battery life. Every file I encoded played nicely on my Zodiac using KinomaPplayer. The encoding was quick, generally about min per hour of video on a Pentium 4 2 GHz machine. The file sizes were very manageable, also.

You can see by the screenshots what the default profile was for my device. Kinoma Player is not just for video, even though that is what it is most well known for. It also has an audio player, picture viewer,and plays streaming media. The player has many strengths, as well as a couple of weaknesses.

Video: Thanks to Kinoma Producer, playing videos with the player is easy. Converted videos can be simply dropped into the Kinoma folder on your SD card.

It seemed worse if I zoomed the video to full screen. The second issue, and this may be nitpicky on my part, is that fullscreen mode is not actually fullscreen. There is always a thin white border around the screen, and the right side retains the menu icons on my Zodiac even in fullscreen mode. When in fullscreen, the title bar and icons below are not shown, but my screenshot app would always bring them up just before it took the screenshot.



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