A common sound issue that almost all Windows consumers deal with at one position or the other is the fact that Flash centered material fail to playback the sound connected to them. Thus, whenever you are running a video on Youtube, Dailymotion, Google Video CNet Video clips and also other Adobe Flash primarily based video sharing web sites,
Office 2007 Professional, the video clip runs correctly but there is certainly no sound.
The second symptomatic element of this dilemma is only the Flash audio is impacted – all of the other Windows appears and audio,
Windows 7 Product Key, like audio files (including mp3, wma, and so forth.) perform just good. This happens for virtually all browsers – which includes IE5,
Microsoft Office Professional 2007, IE7, and Firefox – and throughout all Windows variations – such as XP, 2000,
Office 2007 Professional, as well as Vista. Unless of course you downgrade to Adobe flash Participant 7, this problem persists – particularly in Adobe Flash Players eight and nine.
To resolve this problem of no sound becoming played in Flash based mostly subject material, it is possible to merely download the FixNoFlashSound.reg registry file,
Microsoft Office 2007 Enterprise, (you’ll have to save the file in a place where you can find it easily) and install it. For this, you have to double click on the downloaded file, and ‘confirm’ the pop-up dialog to merge these new values to the existing registry.
Note: Before you download the FixNoFlashSound.reg , I recommend that you check if the wavemapper – msacm32.drv – no flash audio issue is fixed.
If, for some reason, you can’t download the FixNoFlashSound.reg file, then simple copy and paste the following text into a bank notepad file and save it with a .reg extension. (Double-clicking on this file that you have created should have the same results.)
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SOFTWARE\Microsoft\Windows NT\CurrentVersion\Drivers32]
“midimapper”=”midimap.dll”
“msacm.imaadpcm”=”imaadp32.acm”
“msacm.msadpcm”=”msadp32.acm”
“msacm.msg711″=”msg711.acm”
“msacm.msgsm610″=”msgsm32.acm”
“msacm.trspch”=”tssoft32.acm”
“vidc.cvid”=”iccvid.dll”
“VIDC.I420″=”i420vfw.dll”
“vidc.iv31″=”ir32_32.dll”
“vidc.iv32″=”ir32_32.dll”
“vidc.iv41″=”ir41_32.ax”
“VIDC.IYUV”=”iyuv_32.dll”
“vidc.mrle”=”msrle32.dll”
“vidc.msvc”=”msvidc32.dll”
“VIDC.YVYU”=”msyuv.dll”
“wavemapper”=”msacm32.drv”
“msacm.msg723″=”msg723.acm”
“vidc.M263″=”msh263.drv”
“vidc.M261″=”msh261.drv”
“msacm.msaudio1″=”msaud32.acm”
“msacm.sl_anet”=”sl_anet.acm”
“msacm.iac2″=”C:\\WINDOWS\\system32\\iac25_32 .ax”
“vidc.iv50″=”ir50_32.dll”
“wave”=”wdmaud.drv”
“midi”=”wdmaud.drv”
“mixer”=”wdmaud.drv”
“VIDC.WMV3″=”wmv9vcm.dll”
“VIDC.VP40″=”vp4vfw.dll”
“msacm.voxacm160″=”vct3216.acm”
“MSVideo”=”vfwwdm32.dll”
“MSVideo8″=”VfWWDM32.dll”
“wave1″=”wdmaud.drv”
“midi1″=”wdmaud.drv”
“mixer1″=”wdmaud.drv”
“aux”=”wdmaud.drv”
“vidc.VP70″=”vp7vfw.dll”
“vidc.X264″=”x264vfw.dll”
“VIDC.FPS1″=”frapsvid.dll”
“vidc.VP60″=”vp6vfw.dll”
“vidc.VP61″=”vp6vfw.dll”
“vidc.VP62″=”vp6vfw.dll”
“vidc.DIVX”=”DivX.dll”
“VIDC.UYVY”=”msyuv.dll”
“VIDC.YUY2″=”msyuv.dll”
“VIDC.YVU9″=”tsbyuv.dll”
“VIDC.DRAW”=”DVIDEO.DLL”
“VIDC.YV12″=”yv12vfw.dll”
“wave2″=”wdmaud.drv”
“midi2″=”wdmaud.drv”
“mixer2″=”wdmaud.drv”
“aux1″=”wdmaud.drv”
“wave3″=”wdmaud.drv”
“midi3″=”wdmaud.drv”
“mixer3″=”wdmaud.drv”
“aux2″=”wdmaud.drv”
“VIDC.MSUD”=”msulvc05.dll”
“wave4″=”wdmaud.drv”
“midi4″=”wdmaud.drv”
“mixer4″=”wdmaud.drv”
“aux3″=”wdmaud.drv”
Your sound problem should be fixed after this. If it is not, you should try other solutions – such as the Klite Codec solution, the .acm file missing dilemma, and so forth.