VLC update ushers in 4K readiness, improved MKV and audio support

VLC update ushers in 4K readiness, improved MKV and audio support

It’s been a while since ever popular VLC has seen a major update, and today’s debut of version 2.1 — also known as “Rincewind” — packs a handful of features that are sure to please. Most notably, VLC for both Windows and OS X is now 4K-compatible, but VideoLAN didn’t stop there. Also included in the upgrade are improved support for a variety of file types including MKV, AVI and MP4, as well as a beefed up audio core designed to boost performance and fidelity. OS X users will notice adjustments to the player’s UI, including a customizable playback menu and the ability to play video as a desktop background. For those of you interested in porting to Android, iOS or Windows mobile devices, there are also a few tweaks to make the process as pain-free as possible. To see the full list of improvements and download the upgrade, head on over to the source link below.

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Via: 9to5Mac

Source: VideoLAN

VLC 2.1 for iOS adds audio-only playback, streaming over FTP and UPnP

VLC for iOS

VLC returned to iOS with big upgrades like AirPlay and Dropbox integration, but it left out a few of the very valuable features we’ve seen in other media players. The app’s new 2.1 update addresses several of those omissions in one fell swoop. VLC can now play audio-only files, and it will stream content from both UPnP devices and FTP servers. Even a few of the smaller additions could be quite useful for some viewers — there’s a video deinterlacing option, for example, as well as support for subtitles in non-Western languages. We’re sure that VLC 2.1 won’t please everyone, but iOS media lovers who held off on downloading 2.0 will want to give the update a closer look.

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Source: App Store

VLC returns to iOS after two-year hiatus, brings AirPlay and Dropbox integration

VLC returns to iOS after two-year hiatus

VideoLAN’s original VLC for iOS had a brief and rocky history: open source licensing quirks led to the media player being pulled from the App Store just months after launch. More than two years later, it’s back with a compatible license — and it’s bringing a slew of new features in return for the wait. VLC 2.0 supports all the file formats of its desktop counterpart while throwing in AirPlay, background audio, network streaming and numerous smaller tweaks. It’s also better suited to sharing with support for Dropbox, the iOS sharing prompt, web downloads and WiFi uploads. The revived VLC app is gradually rolling out now, and its source code should be available for tinkering by July 19th.

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Via: The Next Web

Source: App Store

Watch What Happens During A DDoS Attack

Over the past couple of months, we’ve been hearing about an increased number of public DDoS  attacks where The Pirate BayReddit and even iMessage users became victims of these attacks. Considering these attacks against a number of popular websites and services have been popping up, we think its best to educate you to what exactly happens when a DDoS attack occurs, and lucky for us, VideoLAN recorded such an attack.

VideoLAN, who are known to be the creators of VLC, suffered a DDoS attack on April 23, which they took a record of to show exactly what happens when a DDoS attack is initiated. The colored balls are requests that are being sent to the server and the small paddle is a representation of the server trying to keep up with these requests, with balls don’t get hit resulting in a 404 error. (more…)

By Ubergizmo. Related articles: Netflix Ditching Microsoft Sliverlight For HTML5, YouTube Co-Founder Announces MixBit Collaborative Video Platform,

    

Official VLC app now out for Android: only an unstable beta, but it works

Official VLC app now out for Android, but only an 'unstable' beta release

Okay, so VLC may not be the media darling it once was, but it still has a legion of fans — as evidenced by the (official) beta version’s warm welcome over at Google Play. Despite a clear warning that the build is unstable and might “kill your kitten,” users report mostly smooth multi-format video playback on a wide range of devices running Android 2.1 and up, and any jitters will no doubt be resolved over time — the whole point is that it’s open-source and ripe for improvement.

Official VLC app now out for Android: only an unstable beta, but it works originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 02 Jul 2012 07:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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