Thank You Malke!
I was able to go in and type:
regsvr32/u lmpgspl.ax
and now I'm able to publish my video from Windows Movie Maker, the only
problem is that the finished product has sound but no picture. I never really
had a problem viewing clips because I only viewed the clips in Windows Movie
Maker, edit them, and then publish the finished product. Now I can publish
but no picture

(... weird
I was wondering . . . how can I get a picture back and will buying a new
video camera get rid of this problem?
"Malke" wrote:
> RuNext wrote:
> > Sorry about that, what filter am I looking for? I see about 8 of them. Please
> > bear with me, I know that these help to view video as well as hear the audio
> > when importing them or publishing them. But I have no idea what to check off
> > or leave on.
>
> I just went through this for a client. The errors occur because the
> Ligos codecs installed aren't really Vista-compatible.
>
> There are a couple of different fixes for this depending on what you
> have installed on your system.
>
> 1. If you have Nero, update to the very latest version.
>
> 2. Unregistering the Ligos codecs (lmpgspl.ax, etc.). To do this, click
> on the Start Orb and type "cmd.exe". Then right-click on Cmd and choose
> Run As Administrator. You will see the cmd prompt. At the prompt, type:
>
> regsvr32 /u lmpgsl.ax [enter]
>
> You'll get a confirmation box saying the unregistration was successful.
> Do this for every codec for which you get the error. My client's box had
> about 4 of these codecs.
>
> 3. If after the unregistering you get an error that the codec can't be
> found, log into an account with administrative privileges (you should
> create at least one extra account like this for emergencies). Go to
> Control Panel>Folder Options>View. Set the options to see all hidden
> files. You'll get several *.ini files on the Desktop - ignore them
> because you aren't going to use this account for anything but
> emergencies - or you can go back to Folder Options and hide the
> protected files when you're done.
>
> Now go to C:\Windows\System32 and find the .dll for which you got the
> error. Right-click on it and Rename to (ex.) lmpgsl.ax.bak. Log off and
> go back to your regular account and see if you can play the movie file
> by double-clicking on it now. You should not get the error any more.
>
>
> Malke
> --
> Elephant Boy Computers
> www.elephantboycomputers.com
> "Don't Panic!"
> MS-MVP Windows - Shell/User
>