Hmm... (again)
The filename looks fine (unless MC is programmed to stop when it sees the string "something wrong".
)
I am starting to think that it might be a more generic problem with the external encoder that occasionally shows up on your specific SW & HW installation. Possibly it has nothing to do with the WMA Pro file format.
What do we/I need to do to make this happen?
You could ask nicely. Perhaps bribe the developers. Send a cake or something.
Seriously speaking, this should be easy for them. Adding it would not cause any problems with other features (decoding & tagging WMA Pro is already fine). Even if only a few users would actually use it, "WMA Professional" would look good in the specs (and naturally those few users would be happier).
When you say config file, is this something I can enable on my local box?
The WMA profiles are stored in [MC14 program location]\Plugins\WMAProfiles\ in xml format. Each file represents an available setting in the WMA encoding options. I once succesfully added a newer "unsupported" WMA lossless format to MC11 by simply replacing one of the profiles with a profile from MC12.
If you can find out the correct code strings you can select one of the profiles and change it to use your preferred settings. Inside MC you would then select the old format knowing that the parameters have been altered.
This link might help:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ee663260(VS.85).aspxHow would changing this value in the encode string affect quality (real or perceived) and file size?
You can't change it. MS has created the predefined combinations and I don't think you can partially modify them.
When the format is lossy the bit depth part in a setting string is just a part of a name that has been chosen by the MS developers. As I said, all typical lossy encoders store data in a stepless floating point format. It is normally converted back to an integer format on decoding.