· Yea I'm guessing the problem is with the PC, mp4 shouldn't be an issue to play with most things unless the phone is doing something weird to them. EDIT - Just found this: Old phones recorded using a simple MPEG-4 video codec. New phones use the H codec. Even still, I'd have thought VLC would be able to play either one. There are times when videos will not play on your Android device due to errors in the internal file hierarchy or low available resources to play the video. Here are two ways in which you can rectify these two scenarios. Method 1: Reboot/ Restart your device. Restarting the device will help restore file hierarchy and structure. · Tap on Forget Network from the newly appeared tab. Tap on the Wi-Fi network again and insert the password. Open the YouTube app again and attempt to Estimated Reading Time: 6 mins.
Solution 8. Download Twitter Video. If you still can't play Twitter videos on Chrome after trying these solutions above, you can try to download Twitter videos and play them on computer/iPhone/Android phone. And, there are a lot of Twitter video downloader on the internet which can help you download videos. If you want to play FLAC files on Android, first you may come up with downloading and installing a FLAC player for Android devices. Android does not have the limitation to the installation source of software, but you better make sure your software is downloaded from a safety website. The powerful download manager allows you to pause and resume downloads, download in the background and download several files at the same time. * How to Use This Video Downloader: Browse social networking or video sites with the built-in browser. - Click the play button of the video you want to download and watch offline.
Restart/reboot the phone. Next, go to Gallery and check if your videos are playing or not. 2. Clear cache on your Android phone. Cached data is required to reduce loading time but clearing the cache is also essential as a part of troubleshooting to address a number of issues that may arise due to corrupted cache data. In most cases, downloading and installing a capable Media Player app should solve the annoying unsupported video format error. But in case you are not interested in downloading and installing an app, the other way around this problem is to 'convert' the video into a format that your phone understands. Tap on Forget Network from the newly appeared tab. Tap on the Wi-Fi network again and insert the password. Open the YouTube app again and attempt to play a video. Check if the YouTube videos not.
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