Thursday, December 11

VLC Finally Exits Beta Phase, Brings Out Stable Version

VLC Finally Exits Beta Phase, Brings Out Stable Version

We have much love for the VLC media player – it’s an app for people working on desktops and laptops who want a media player that works with just about any media format you throw at it. It just works, and we were pretty excited when VLC wanted to bring its goods over to Android some two years ago. All that time, the VLC app for Android stayed in beta – until today, when we finally have VLC 1.0 in our hands.

There are still stuff to tweak with the roll-out – the URL for the Google Play Store listing betrays the fact that it has been in beta for a while, and they have not changed it yet. Ditto with the Play Store description. But other than that, we have VLC 1.0 in all its glory – with a host of bug fixes and performance updates, of course.

The interface is also available in dark or white colors, and it comes with DVD iso and menu support, an equalizer, and better playlist management. The new version also has an updated SD card detection feature. Lastly, hardware acceleration for video and graphics is now enabled by default, hopefully the code is now more stable to handle it.
Primarily, VLC 1.0 fixes the issue with ARMv8 processors and the instances when it crashes when used in Android 5.

VLC for Android media player is free to download and will (mostly) work with any device supporting Android 2.1 or higher. Of course, the better the specs, the better chances you have of running the app smoothly.
To download VLC Player click here

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.