Almost all modern video cards are HDCP-compliant, but some cards designed for workstation use (e.g. If your video card is not HDCP-compliant, you will not be able to access protected content on the PC. If you are running WMC inside a VM of any kind, including VMWare, VirtualBox, Parallels, or Hyper-V (including the Hyper-V host), you will not be able to access protected content on the PC. There are several possible reasons for this: This indicates that WMC is not detecting the presence of a protected output path to your screen. Video Error: Files needed to display video are not installed These steps will need to be repeated on any other PCs you’re using WMC in, and in the future if you ever go through the TV setup wizard in Windows Media Center again. This means that 44.1 will be left enabled, and 48.1 needs to be disabled. For most people, HDHomeRun Setup will list 44-3 for that channel. For example, for KTVUDT, there will be entries in WMC that say 44.1 and 48.1. ![]() and -, compare this to the channel listed in the Tune column for that channel in HDHomeRun Setup, and uncheck the ones that don’t match. If you mouse over the different sources, it will show you at the bottom the channel number it is on. ![]() In WMC, you’ll see all the different sources you have for each channel. To correct the situation, go into Tasks > Settings > TV > Guide > Edit Channels > affected channel > Edit Sources. If it guesses wrong, the channel will not work. ![]() WMC isn’t smart enough to know which one(s) you can receive, so it adds both, then guesses which one to use. In short, this issue occurs because these stations are/were transmitting on more than one channel in your region, either because of a channel change, or because of translator stations that are used to serve nearby towns that can’t receive the primary transmission due to terrain.
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