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VLC goes to nine point two

By Nathan Willis on September 26, 2008 (7:00:00 PM)

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Sometimes I get the feeling that I only know about 5% of what VLC can do. Everyone knows it's a dependable, free, cross-platform media player. But read through the release notes for the latest version, 0.9.2, and you will see a dizzying array of server, network streaming, and conversion functions, most of which I have never even touched -- and the new VLC exposes a lot more of that functionality.

You can grab source code and Windows and Mac OS X binaries from videolan.org. Ready-made builds for Linux are not as easy to come by; VideoLAN prefers to work through distros' packaging systems, and the hot-off-the-presses 0.9.2 is not yet available in most of them.

There is a good chance that there is an official or amateur build is already compiled for your distribution; start by looking on your distro's mailing lists and forum, and check the VideoLAN forum as well. If none is available, you can always compile your own. The VLC wiki has instructions.

It's what's on the outside that counts

The first changes you will see are to the interface. Gone is the old wxWidgets-based look, replaced with Qt by default. As with previous releases, you can also start up VLC with a range of other interfaces, including command line, ncurses, mouse gestures, keyboard-only, a Web app running on port 8080, and (should you be so inclined) bitmapped "skins" a la Winamp.

The menus and tools have been reorganized, consolidating items from the View and Settings menus into Tools, aptly renaming File to Media, and introducing top-level Playback and Playlist menus. Playback contains navigation controls, including bookmarks and title/chapter seeking.

The new Playlist module functions like a traditional audio-only player (think Amarok or Rhythmbox), with music library browsing, searching, metadata and album art retrieval, and so on. It supports Shoutcast and Last.fm directly, and has a powerful Lua-based scripting engine with which you can write handlers for other network services. Example scripts supplied in the release open media from YouTube, Google Video, Metacafe, and DailyMotion.

Okay, fine -- the inside matters, too

The list of transport protocols and codecs supported in the new release is dizzying; check the project wiki for a complete list. The highlights include VP6, Monkey Audio, ATRAC3, video4linux2, JACK audio, MIDI synthesis, and TiVo transfers. Support is improved for many other formats, with the added features like subtitles, closed captioning, chapters, and tags.

VLC can pipe audio and video through built-in effects filters as it plays, regardless of the underlying codec, container, or source location. This release adds nine new video filters and two new audio filters. Some are standard image adjustments, such as saturation or gamma, some are special effects like motion blur or rotation, and some are just for fun, like the "puzzle game" that breaks the video into tiles and shuffles them on the plane.

It's an impressive collection, and some of the effects -- such as audio replay gain and watermark logo removal -- make VLC a useful tool for folks who edit video.

Conversion experience

Such usage of VLC is possible because, in addition to playing back media, the app can stream audio and video over a variety of network protocols, and can convert content between codecs and container formats.

While all major OSes offer dedicated video conversion utilities, VLC's built-in conversion tool is easier to use than any competitor I have tried. You do not have to look up a comprehensive series of command-line arguments and flags in order to construct a conversion filter; the app takes care of that for you. And since playback is built in, you can examine the input file's settings in detail before you start, something the drag-and-drop converters cannot do.

Both conversion and streaming use the same media selector for playback, and this selection tool is another of VLC's strengths. From the Media menu, all of the options, from Open File, Open Disc, and Open Network, to Convert/Save and Streaming, use a unified interface that exposes the relevant options for each alternative, and makes its best guess at the appropriate settings. After all, if all you want to do is save a copy of a video to local storage, you shouldn't have to learn how RTSP works.

Pros and cons

The new playlist features and reorganized user interface go a long way toward making VLC 0.9.2 the easiest open source media player to use. There are still quirks, however. For example, to activate audio and video filters, you must bring up the Adjustments and Effects window, which you do by selecting the Tools -> Extended Settings menu item. And there are, inexplicably, two menu items that bring up the playlist -- Playlist -> Show Playlist, and Tools -> Playlist.... Finally, I would prefer to have VLC function entirely within a single window, but instead it opens separate windows for the playback display, playlist, effects, bookmark browser, and media information screen. That gets cluttered.

But even with those quibbles, VLC is easier to use and does a more consistent job of exposing its functionality than either MPlayer of Xine. VLC's interface does not get in your way, and you do not have to read a tutorial to get started with it. It just works. Add to that the fact that VLC is robust on all three major desktop OSes, and you have a winner.

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on VLC goes to nine point two

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VLC goes to nine point two

Posted by: Dummy00001 on September 26, 2008 11:36 PM
0.9.2 is big news for anime comunity: VLC (and is first on Linux to) supports ASS (Advanced SubStation) subtitles which became de facto standard for softsubs. (Hm.. first on Mac OS X too ^_^)

There are still many quirks though and most notable of them - subtitles are hidden on "Pause" - was promised to be fixed in 0.9.3

Finally, there is a light at the end of the tunnel.

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Re: VLC goes to nine point two

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 147.4.235.31] on September 28, 2008 04:25 AM
Dummy00001, you are DEAD WRONG.

MPlayer and SMPlayer have supported ASS on Linux for YEARS.

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Re: VLC goes to nine point two

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 147.4.235.31] on September 28, 2008 04:26 AM
MPlayer and SMPlayer have supported ASS for years on Linux. Get your facts straight!

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VLC goes to nine point two

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 69.137.240.44] on September 27, 2008 12:37 AM
My only grip is that they moved the equlizer settings from the right click menu to another new place and you cant really access it vi fullscreen. that and it playes embedded subtitles when you first open the file i just want a command that i can use that will set it so that doesnt happen becuase it just sucks when im watching enime with english audio and english subs for the japanese popup and they arent even correct

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VLC goes to nine point two... erhmn make that point nine point three

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 81.234.241.96] on September 27, 2008 05:13 AM
"On the heels of 0.9.2 the VideoLAN team presents version 0.9.3, the first bugfix release of the 0.9 series."

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VLC goes to nine point two

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 82.192.13.179] on September 27, 2008 08:47 PM
A decent update, for sure. But I'll stay with aTunes as I cannot live without a built-in media library - which at least I haven't yet discovered for VLC. Is there such a thing at all?

--
Robert
http://awasteofwords.com/

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VLC goes to nine point two

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 71.252.142.181] on September 28, 2008 05:27 AM
VLC is awesome. It can play anything without any extra codecs.... on any platform. They recently fixed the full screening issue on my plasma too!

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VLC goes to nine point two

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 213.148.228.207] on September 28, 2008 09:09 AM
I can't believe you call it a "dependable" player. It has many bugs for years on many windows and mac systems I used. I only use VLC to playback corrupted video. On windows you could better use CCCP and on Mac MPlayer OSX extended.

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VLC goes to nine point two

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 82.149.163.44] on September 28, 2008 03:07 PM
i love VLC i have it runing on my pda (also on the pc) and it works like a charme, but i agree that there are many "hidden gems" in the program and what you can do with it, for me the main reason for using it is just works :)
---
Sam(antha)
http://www.geschaeftsvordruck.de

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VLC goes to nine point two

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 216.239.82.81] on September 30, 2008 04:35 PM
I'm at work so Im stuck on a Windows machine and just installed it.
I think the best way to describe the new interface is by what my supervisor said about 5mins ago: "It sucks ***."
I appreciate the new options of the Windows interface like the time/countdown even the chintzy sound color slider but the buttons are just horrible.

It used to be bland a la Windows 95 which didnt bother me before (because you mainly use fullscreen and pause/play wth the space bar) but this...
This is the reason why people keep claim that free software HAS to concentrate also on esthetics, not just function.

But again, when I watch its full-screen so it is not a deal breaker.
VLC is the best and I have no need or intention to even try another.
It saved me from those days when I used to run about 4 different players on WinXP and spending hours playing the codec hunting game.

Since VLC, I have become format agnostic.

Buttons aside, this is how freeware should be made: make the top 5 functions that people use as easy and possible and have advanced and powerful options for geeks.

When I switched my dad to PCLinuxOS, he was already immersed in FF and OO and when I showed him Amarok which would relpace his Winamp, he asked me "But I still get to keep my video player, right?"
Dad knows what he likes.
And he likes it simple and that it just works.
That's what VLC does.
Thank god you can skin it though.


PS: I like the fact that the control bar appears for a few secs in full screen mode but there is no time shown. If Im watching full screen and want to see the time left in my show/movie, I still have to double click to check it out and double click to go back instead of just touching the mouse.

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VLC goes to nine point two

Posted by: Anonymous [ip: 85.107.198.88] on October 22, 2008 03:14 PM
This release adds nine new video filters and two new audio filters. Some are standard image adjustments, such as saturation or gamma, some are special effects like motion blur or rotation, and some are just for fun, like the "puzzle game" that breaks the video into tiles and shuffles them on the plane. http://www.iplaygames2.com play games that and it playes embedded subtitles when you first open the file i just want a command that i can use that will set it so that doesnt happen becuase it just sucks when im watching enime with english audio and english subs for the japanese popup and they arent even correct

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