![]() ![]() The only feature that PowerDVD has that VLC doesn't, is the ability to move one frame at a time. 99% of the time, you can find a free, open-source program that works many times better than its proprietary, expensive counterpart.Īuthor Janskeet Time 1 10:47 PM Post link Why does PowerDVD cost $69-$100, while VLC player is free and has more and better features?Īuthor ChainsawAsh Time 1 10:37 PM Post linkīecause that's the way the world of software works. Moth3r said: No, there is no video embedding option in this forum software (thank god!)Īuthor Janskeet Time 1 8:55 PM Post link CompMovieGuy said:Īuthor Janskeet Time 1 9:48 PM (Edited) Post link VLC can do HD, just as long as you have the computer to handle it, but either way, you computer is going to scale the video to your screens resolution, so if you try to play 1080P on it, its gonna scale it to 1440x900 That screen resolution is HD, it can do 720P. But does VLC play HD? What about InterActual player? Does that play in HD? My computer monitor's max screen resolution is 1440 by 900. ![]() But does VLC play HD? What about InterActual player? Does that play in HD?Īuthor CompMovieGuy Time 1 7:16 AM Post link Janskeet said: I have to get the Ultra version of 8 or 9 which is another $70. ![]() I have PowerDVD 8 standard version which I found out doesn't play HD. One possible explanation is that VLC reads non-copy-protected DVDs at max speed, and apparently my drive doesn't read burned discs so well at max speed - although it reads them OK at half speed.Does VLC media player play in HD? - Original Trilogy logo Sign Inĭoes VLC media player play in HD? Author Janskeet Date 1, 6:50 AM Author Janskeet Time 1 6:50 AM Post link On the other hand, you could use VLC with the 300 ms cache to test your burnt media: If the outer-edge area plays fine with finicky VLC, then it must be a pretty decent burn, because discs that skip very badly with VLC will still play fine on a DVD player. The default 300 ms apparently allows for little or no error correction. ![]() (Consider that the drive has to slow down when it gets to the error-prone outer area of the disc.) So if you notice skipping glitches near the outer edge of your burnt DVDs when playing them with VLC, you might try changing the cache value. I recently discovered that increasing VLC's DVD playback cache from 300 ms to 8x300 ms = 2400 ms seems to resolve this skipping problem for me, perhaps because it allows more time for adequate error correction. And the skipping would be a whole lot worse with lower-quality media, even though the discs still played fine in DVD players and could be ripped to hard disk without problems, presumably because of error correction. Has anyone else experienced playback problems (skipping) near the outer edge of burnt DVD-R/DVD+R discs with VLC media player? I use an NEC ND-3520A drive, and even with high quality media such as Taiyo Yuden or Maxell that would play fine in DVD players, I would occasionally notice some minor skipping at the very end of the disc with VLC. ![]()
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