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posted by chromas on Tuesday July 31 2018, @03:06PM   Printer-friendly
from the blacklist-vs.-whitelist dept.

Huawei's aggressive battery management on some of its newer phones can cause background apps to be shut down unexpectedly. This has led to one-star reviews for affected apps, such as VLC on Google Play. In response, VideoLAN has blacklisted these phones:

The negative reviews are a result of Huawei's aggressive battery management and tendency to kill background apps, which directly affects VLC's background audio playback feature. Huawei users on VLC's forums are well aware of the issue. It's possible to manually disable these battery optimizations and have the app function properly in the background, but VLC claims that people often don't know how to do that, so they blame the app instead.

The VLC team is specifically blacklisting the Huawei P8, P10, and P20, but users of those devices can still manually download the APK from VLC's website if they're interested in using the player; they're just being blocked from getting it via Google Play. Huawei Honor phones aren't affected. In a tweet translated from French, VideoLAN said, "Blocking normal Android functions is totally abnormal. In that case, why not kill all the apps, and keep the phone off, that would save even more battery!"

VideoLAN said that Huawei refused to whitelist VLC (to prevent the battery-saving feature from killing the application) while whitelisting "competitors". Later, the project got "an answer from Huawei", but the solution could take weeks to arrive.

See also: VideoLAN was right to ban Huawei phones from downloading VLC, but it's users that lose (archive)


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  • (Score: 3, Interesting) by takyon on Tuesday July 31 2018, @04:40PM (1 child)

    by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Tuesday July 31 2018, @04:40PM (#715269) Journal

    I put VLC on my Chromebook. I would call it the best of a bad bunch. It has done fine on the desktop and recent major versions have fixed a lot of the annoying bugs.

    One interesting thing is that Chromebooks will soon support Chromebook apps, Android apps, and sandboxed Linux applications... and there's a VLC version for all 3.

    I avoid playing videos on my crappy Android phone so I don't even have VLC on there. But I would not be surprised if the Android version is getting less attention than the Linux/Windows/Mac version.

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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by DannyB on Tuesday July 31 2018, @05:15PM

    by DannyB (5839) Subscriber Badge on Tuesday July 31 2018, @05:15PM (#715292) Journal

    I installed the Android VLC on my Pixelbook. It works. But I can have a superior experience running VLC under Xfce chrooted with Crouton. The Linux VLC has better controls and UI. And it is native Intel code. I don't actually know whether the Android VLC is ARM code, or whether there is an Intel compiled version and the Play store would automagically select it.

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