You’d rather be stuck in 2007 in the year 2017. “I don’t want to be stuck in 2000”, right. It doesn’t make me want to gouge my eyes out, as well. The OSC it has is the definition of modern. Why do you have to shit on its simple design? If you want modern, use mpv. MPC-HC might’ve looked old a couple of years ago (when shading was the norm), but now, it fucking fits in today’s flat design world. Remember KMPlayer? I remember that around 2009-2010 it looked way better than the current BE. I’m on XP myself, but even on a modern OS (with flat design) it looks out of place.īE just looks absolutely repulsive, and even when you disable the black theme bad design decisions are noticeable everywhere. If anything, THAT is a strain for my eyes. The ugly shading the black BE theme has? It looks fucking ancient. Tom Hawack and zero, if anything, BE looks like a skin teenage boys in 2007 would use for their player. Too bad that its future is uncertain when people have involved time and effort into it wanting to make something they believe in, but such is the fate of too many side projects. Those were the days… xDīut I found out that the same guy made yet another player – PotPlayer and I used it for a bit, also going back and forth between VLC, SMPlayer and those MPC-HC/BE. And only on KMP it would stay in sync just as long as didn’t touch anything (play, pause, skip). MKV format, but the file playback was so heavy on the that poor archaic PC that that on all other players audio and video went out of sync after about 5 minutes in. I used to love it, because it saved me once on a very old PC where I wanted to watch some anime in. KMPlayer was fantastic, but the developer sold it to Pandora-something and they ruined it with useless bloatware like you need Flash Player to be able to open and use it, because it has some album art or whatever thing going on inside the video window, where I also think it displays ads or content that I couldn’t care any less about. I remember having trouble finding a way to switch dual channel audio anime (I was using either MPC-HC or MPC-BE) and I didn’t have the patience to waste time fooling around, so I ended up installing PotPlayer and stuck with it ever since. Rest of the features are pretty much the same between the two. – Extra sharp GPU-based video resizing options – Can natively stream and download YouTube videos in user-specified format – Ability to skip DVD menus/ads and directly play main title – Stereo crossfeed feature (for headphones) – Natively integrates LAV Filters (MPC-BE can use them thru External filters) – Repeat mode: Repeat File/Repeat entire playlist – Jump to Beginning of playback using Home key – File management commands like Delete to Recycle Bin, Open file location, Add containing folder I compared the two and came up with a list of features unique to both of them: It has been updated to use the very latest Windows media features and technologies (Enhanced Video Renderer, WASAPI, DXVA2) so I see it very much relevant for the foreseeable future :) Of course, MPC-BE is an excellent fork. Get it for PowerPC or Intel.Sad news but it’s not like it will suddenly stop working or lose its usefulness. Note that support ended for all releases listed below and hence they won't receive any further updates. You can find recommendations for the respective operating system version below. We provide older releases for users who wish to deploy our software on legacy releases of Mac OS X. Older versions of Mac OS X and VLC media player The last version is 3.0.4 and can be found here. Support for NPAPI plugins was removed from all modern web browsers, so VLC's plugin is no longer maintained. You can also choose to install a Universal Binary. If you need help in finding the correct package matching your Mac's processor architecture, please see this official support document by Apple. Note that the first generation of Intel-based Macs equipped with Core Solo or Core Duo processors is no longer supported. Previous devices are supported by older releases. It runs on any Mac with a 64-bit Intel processor or an Apple Silicon chip. VLC media player requires Mac OS X 10.7.5 or later.
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