OK.It is gone. The new 200% is the old 400% with a non-linear scale.
If by “dynamic” you mean from too quite to suddenly too loud.It is cubic. This provides a much better dynamic range than the linear scale.
I haven’t done any math with it; I just know that 25% and 50% are barely audible in 2.0+ and then 75% suddenly jumps noticeably in volume. By 100%, it’s too loud. Hopefully once the wrinkles in 2.1 are ironed out, it will be smooth again with fine-grained increments.Assuming the same range, cubic or logarithmic scale provide better dynamic ranges than the linear scale. Of course, if the actual range is different, that is comparing apples and oranges.
I’m not comparing to previous versions of VLC, I am talking about version 2 by itself. If you play something at 50%, it is too low and barely audible. If you raise it to 100%, it jumps a lot. My point is that there is no fine-grained, small-interval variation like there was in 1.x; it goes from being too quiet to too loud too fast.Your claim is 100% presposterous since 100% is the same with linear or cubic scales, meaning no (de)amplification.
Then even 75% is completely inaudible. That’s the point!, that the difference between ~50% and ~100% is not smooth; it jumps.If 100% is too loud, it's time to reduce the volume on your loud speaker.
Then you must be using the normalization or have unusual audio hardware or something. For everybody else, the difference between ~25% to ~100% is just too large and provides really poor control.I have to disagree. I much prefer the current 0-125% cubic scale over the old 0-200% linear scale in terms of UI response.
I can’t fathom why anyone would want the volume control to be worse, but I doubt anybody is going to fork it just to fix it. We’ll likely just end up keeping the old version (along with any vulnerabilities), switching to another program (GomPlayer is a good runner-up), or just putting up with the inconvenience of 2.x and cursing it every time the problem rears its head.You are free to tweak VLC to your liking if you disagree with the developers.
Actually you did:All volume steps are configurable... Noone spoke about forking...
I take you are referring to the Audio output volume step setting now right? I have never had to adjust audio settings in 1.x, but I’ll try adjusting some of the settings in 2.x to see what I can do with it. (I don’t see why selecting between the new and old audio scales couldn’t be an option.)Anyway, if you disagree, you are free to change your VLC build to your liking.
I did not.Actually you did:All volume steps are configurable... Noone spoke about forking...Anyway, if you disagree, you are free to change your VLC build to your liking.
I take you are referring to the Audio output volume step setting now right? I have never had to adjust audio settings in 1.x, but I’ll try adjusting some of the settings in 2.x to see what I can do with it. (I don’t see why selecting between the new and old audio scales couldn’t be an option.)
I don’t know how else to interpret “free to change your VLC build to your liking” other than to compile a customized version from source.I did not.Actually you did:All volume steps are configurable... Noone spoke about forking...Anyway, if you disagree, you are free to change your VLC build to your liking.
Like: "change the preferences"?I don’t know how else to interpret “free to change your VLC build to your liking” other than to compile a customized version from source.
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