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posted by mrpg on Sunday February 11 2018, @10:56AM   Printer-friendly
from the vetinari dept.

VideoLAN has released version 3.0.0 of the VLC media player for Windows, Linux, BSD, Android, and macOS. The new version is billed as enabling hardware decoded playback of 4K, 8K, and 360-degree video (in a demonstration video, VLC 3.0.0 is shown playing 8K 48fps 360-degree video on a Samsung Galaxy S8).

3.0.0 adds support for (not exhaustive):

Linux/BSD default video output is now OpenGL, instead of Xvideo.

The 3.0.x branch of VLC will be maintained as long-term support versions and will be the last releases on Windows XP (with significant limitations), Vista, macOS 10.7, 10.8 & 10.9, iOS 7 & 8, Android 2.x, 3.x, 4.0.x & 4.1.x, and the last to run on compilers before gcc 5.0 and clang 3.4, or equivalent.

From VLC Android developer Geoffrey Métais's blog post about the release, which discusses why Chromecast support took so long to add, as well as other missing features that have now been added to the Android version:

Chromecast support is everywhere and VLC took years to get it, right, but there are plenty of good reasons for it:

First of all, VideoLAN is a nonprofit organization and not a company. There are few developers paid for making VLC, most of them do it in their free time. That's how you get VLC for free and without any ads!

Also, VLC is 100% Open Source and Chromecast SDK isn't: We had to develop our very own Chromecast stack by ourselves. This is also why there is no voice actions for VLC (except with Android Auto), [and] we cannot use Google Play Services.

Furthermore, Chromecast is not designed to play local video files: When you watch a Youtube video, your phone is just a remote controller, nothing more. Chromecast streams the video from youtube.com. That's where it becomes complicated, Chromecast only supports very few codecs number, let's say h264. Google ensures that your video is encoded in h264 format on youtube.com, so streaming is simple. With VLC, you have media of any format. So VLC has to be a http server like youtube.com, and provide the video in a Chromecast compatible format. And of course in real time, which is challenging on Android because phones are less powerful than computers.

At last, VLC was not designed to display a video on another screen. It took time to properly redesign VLC to nicely support it. The good news is we did not make a Chromecast specific support, it is generic renderers: in the next months we can add UPnP support for example, to cast on any UPnP box or TV!

Also at The Verge and Tom's Hardware.

Related: Stable Release of VLC 1.0 for Android
VLC 2.0 for Android Released
EU Offers Cash Bounties to Improve the Security of VLC Media Player
Google Won't Take Down Pirate VLC With 5M Downloads (Update: They Have Taken it Down)


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  • (Score: 3, Insightful) by urza9814 on Monday February 12 2018, @07:28PM

    by urza9814 (3954) on Monday February 12 2018, @07:28PM (#636792) Journal

    And as for bloat in the application itself, it tries to really be a kitchen sink. Don't get me wrong, it's a great program and I use it as my media player of choice. But it has a lot of excess features thrown in that I wish were separate like blue ray support and streaming servers. Just give me a compact, stable, sleek player that can handle any codec and source with good hardware acceleration.

    How is it bloated? Because it's not yet another mplayer clone? Sure likes like mplayer is what you actually want here.

    VLC isn't just a player, it's a goddamn video swiss army knife. Where many (particularly Windows) users would have one program to do conversion, a different program for playing optical media, a different program for viewing network streams, a different program for local capture devices, a different program for sending network streams, a different program for ripping...I just go "Oh, I need to do something for video...I'll use VLC." Instead of installing and keeping track of twenty different bloated pieces of garbage, I get to install a single compact utility that just freakin' works. If you only ever use one feature, then sure, it's "bloated" for that feature. But that's because it's NOT just a media player.

    The value of VLC is not that it plays video. The value of VLC is that it can accomplish pretty much any one-off video tasks you might have. Girlfriend asks how to rip a DVD? VLC. Need to stream your desktop to someone over the network using entirely your own infrastructure? You only need one piece of software -- VLC. Guy at work asks for help transcoding a video? Give him VLC. Don't have any software to capture stills from your webcam? Sure you do -- VLC. People ask me for help with their computers all the time, and if that question includes the word "video" my answer is probably going to be VLC. I don't have to Duck it, I don't have to learn a dozen or more tools for four or five different platforms, just three letters answers all of it: VLC.

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