![]() Implementation of the MPRIS2 interface to control media players. New JSON requests on the web interface to control running VLC instances. New libVLC examples are available: media player, photobooth and mediainfo clones. LibVLC, libVLCcore and libcompat have switched from GPL to LGPLv2.1+. New Dirac/VC-2 encoder, faster than the previous one. SDI and HD-SDI card support for input on Linux. Support for EBU subtitles (stl) and EIA-608. Support for Jpeg-2000 and DNxHD/VC-3 in 10bits. Rewritten linked segments and ordered chapter files support.Ĭorrect support for FLAC, RV and Hi10p in MKV. Support for all QTKit devices through qtcapture and qtsound modules.Ĭontinued support for X 10.5 and PPC users (1080p and ProRes on Dual-G5!). Extensions support and better Lion integration. ![]() Available in 2 colors: Lion grey and QTX black. Support for new adaptive streaming protocols, like HLS and DASH. Support for SDI capture cards and QTKit devices. AACS and BD+ DRM libraries and keys are not shipped, for legal reasons. ![]() ![]() Menus are deactivated in this release (will come soon). Important changes in RealVideo and Real Format support.ĬrystalHD cards and Android OpenMAX support for hardware decoding. Rewritten support for images, including jpeg, png, xcf, bmp. Support for 10bits codecs, WMV image and some other codecs. Multi-threaded decoding for H.264, MPEG-4/Xvid and WebM. New audio outputs for iOS, Android and OS/2. Simplification of the audio core for faster processing. New dynamic range compressor and karaoke filters. New deinterlacing filter, including an Inverse Telecine algorithm. New debanding, grain, denoising and anti-flickering filters. New video outputs for Windows 7, Android, iOS and OS/2. Shader support in the OpenGL output, for colorspace conversion, including 10bits. Rewritten video output core and modules, allowing subpicture blending in GPU. * Multiple fixes on AAC handling View full changelog All features * Fix password search using the Kwallet backend * Fix some crashes on macOS when switching application * Fix some MPRIS inconsistencies that broke some OS widgets on Linux * Fix some rendering issues on Linux with the fullscreen controller * Update of fluidlite, fixing some MIDI rendering on Windows * Fix some HLS/TS streams with ID3 prefix * Fix duration on short and small Ogg/Opus files ![]() * Fix AVI files with flipped RAW video planes * Fix black screen on poorly edited MP4 files on Android Mediacodec * Fix some FLAC VBR files playback regression It activates Super Resolution upscaling by default on nVidia RTX GPU Psst - if you’re on Windows and macOS you need to check a “VLC integration” option in MakeMKV’s Preferences section, but this isn’t required on Linux.VLC 3.0.19 RTX is a custom version of "Vetinari" This will ensure you can continue using the software for the next few months (though you will need to enter a new key at some point).įinally, to enable direct Blu-ray playback in VLC, run: sudo ln -s libmmbd.so.0 /usr/lib/Īnd you’re all set - go grab some popcorn! Insert a Blu-ray, open VLC, and go to “Open Disc…” > Blu-ray > Play. Now open MakeMKV (be aware if you have a disc in your drive when you launch the app it will scan it before you can do anything else) and enter the latest beta key in the ‘register’ box. I don’t know if the extras are strictly necessary, but they sound relevant, and they don’t take up much room: sudo apt install vlc libbluray2 libaacs0 deb, or whatever, just don’t use the sandboxed version from the Snapstore) plus a couple of dependencies. Next, install VLC from the Ubuntu archives (or a. Remember: you CAN compile MakeMKV manually instead – I’m just lazy and trusting! sudo add-apt-repository ppa:heyarje/makemkv-beta sudo apt install makemkv-bin makemkv-oss Using random repos from people you don’t know is plainly a Not Clever Thing™ to do, but this PPA has been around for years, and no-one, to my knowledge, has ever had any “issues” with it. Alternatively, you can use a third-party PPA that pre-packages the latest MakeMKV beta release for easy install on Ubuntu and Ubuntu-based distros - this is the route I used. This is not as hard as it sounds the MakeMKV forums cover the process step-by-step. Installing MakeMKV on most Linux distributions is done by compiling it.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |