VLC is the supreme of all open source projects, you used it in school, college, work and home.
I used it since I was a child and it has never failed on me. It didn’t matter what type of file you chucked at it, it would run it.
Do you disagree or agree with VLC being the best media player? What are your thoughts?
We all have Jean-Baptiste Kempf, and many other brilliant volunteer developers to thank for it
VLC for the everyday person, all the way until you get to enthusiast class, then you use MPV.
Shortcuts, lightweight, CLI etc…
There is a CLI for VLC… just sayin’…
mpv on desktop, all the way
vlc on phone, all the way
There is a CLI for VLC… just sayin’…
It very much needs to update its interface.
VLC 4.0 will be released with a massive change in the interface…eventually.
Will it be before or after Star Citizen?
If I cared one wit about either of them, I’d put money on VLC. If only because Star Citizen won’t make it before the heat death of the universe.
I’ve been waiting for a Dark Mode for VLC for over a decade. It’s absurd. Yes I know some skins sorta do that, but they all suck because they change everything around and remove buttons and options instead of just making the default UI darker.
the thing can read fucking SNES soundtrack files out of the box. i’m sure it could run a marathon if you asked it to
It flawlessly plays me 1080p videos on my 8 year old smart phone with a 480p screen. It is the most performative app I have.
Also plays Amiga .mod files.
VLC has pretty mediocre rendering, it stutters a lot even on a fast PC, or renders with grey artifacts. MPV is open source, renders much clearer and faster and can be used as the backend for any simple or advanced GUI video player.
That said, VLC was great back in the early 2000’s, when it and it alone could open basically any media file and file containing media including mkv. Nowadays every video player does that.
VLC is the best media player, but the Linux kernel is the “supreme of all open source projects”.
Linux contains (edit) proprietary (/e) binary blobs. Not sure if that disqualifies it for being supreme of “open source projects” but if the question was about “free software projects” I am certain it would.
I think the best player is mpv because it supports real-time anime upscaling with plugins
Like AI?
I think it’s more like shaders with sharpness that don’t look bad
Can you elaborate?
There are software and instructions
Ffmpeg guys, ffmpeg first king… And VLC golden second.
gstreamer lads, gstreamer is the god of all media pipelines
I didn’t expect to click on a VLC appreciation thread agreeing that it’s awesome only to end up maybe switching to MPV based on the comments, but such is life I guess.
I will remember it just like I will remember winamp, as one of the greats of its time.
As a friend of mine said some years ago “VLC will play a slice of cucumber” that pretty much sums it up.
I used to use it, but then I switched to MPV, as it works a lot better with hardware acceleration. MPV supports more methods for hardware decoding (e.g. nvdec), and also MPV will keep the frames in VRAM when doing hardware decoding, and do additional processing and presentation using the GPU, while VLC copies everything back to system RAM and processes the frame on the CPU.
At the time I switched hardware decoding with copy-back would actually result in twice the CPU usage compared to software decoding, but that was a long time ago. Also, I would get tearing in VLC and not in MPV.
I’ve ran into a few issues with VLC. That being said, I’d probably only ever replace VLC with WinAmp.
My only complaint about VLC is that it consistently drops the first few seconds of audio anytime I start playing a new file…
I was wondering where that issue came from
I had one big problem with VLC, in that it could not figure out which of my monitors I wanted the video to run fullscreen on. That was infuriating to the point I switched to MPV, and I’m very happy with it
I sometimes got performance issues or corrupted frames, so I mostly use mpv. It sometimes fails for some files so I need to switch to VLC to handle them.