![]() Support for THP, Renderware and Escape Replay videogames files. Support for WebVTT, Ogg/VP8, Opus/MKV, CAF. Support for encoding in H.265, Opus and VP9. Rewritten support for WMV, Ogg, MP4 and AVI, notably for seeking. ![]() Acceleration of VP9 and H.265/HEVC decoders. It is still possible to find a 32 bit version of the regular VLC desktop app, however, but the Windows 10 is 64 bit only, and given the trend in computers, will probably stay that way. Support for BD-Java menus and overlay in Blu-Ray. I was wondering why the picture quality seemed especially bad on some files, so I dug around and found disabling the post-processing filter actually improved things. The Windows 10 version of VLC player is exclusively for 圆4 architecture, meaning there is no 32 bit version available. If "post processing" is activated, it seems to cancel out deinterlacing. I found how to fix it, though, by going into the "vlcrc" settings file and changing it there. This is a cross-platform versatile media player that does one thing well: attempts to play just about every format available. For some reason, the playback speed setting default became 0.90x instead of 1.00x. Other than the above, all the other handy features are cool. It time-stretches the audio properly when playing faster (PotPlayer causes a kind of reverb effect MPC-HC still has no time-stretch at all). It can properly play all formats faster when want to (MPC-HC can't play. ![]() It supports playing Windows Media Center recordings (.wtv) properly, including those flagged as "protected" (PotPlayer plays my digital tuner recordings with the audio out of sync MPC-HC can't play "protected" recordings). Compared to my old favorite MPC-HC, and the new PotPlayer, I now prefer good ol' VLC because: ![]()
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