Comparison: VLC vs BPP with BR repacks

macOS specific usage questions
mike18xx
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Comparison: VLC vs BPP with BR repacks

Postby mike18xx » 23 Mar 2018 01:53

(I'm placing this in Troubleshooting because some of the problems encountered appear to be solvable bugs.)
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* Q. "What are BR repack?" ...These are large files (typically 40-60gb) which are lossless Blu-ray remuxes in 2160 resolution (i.e., 4k). Most 64-bit CPU desktops from 2009 onward are capable of playing them given more than rudimentary ram, with the player software being the primary impediment.

* Q. "What is a BPP?" ...Blu-ray Player Pro is a payware Mac application. Why it? --It's the first one I found when I went looking for alternative have-a-Mac-version players. (It has a free version, which overlays a watermark during playback.)

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Comparison materials:

Hardware: a mid-2011 27" iMac, 3.4ghz i7, 12gb ram, with original 1TB drive and stock 2gb video card. The machine's drive is mostly full, and the file to be played resides in the last 150gb of space (which is near the drive-spindle, or the slowest part of a mechanical drive). There are no external speakers. (The "thick-side" optical-drive aluminum iMacs had quite-nice stereo speakers, although not nearly as lush and rich-sounding as those in the now-obsolete "white" polycarbonate 24" iMacs, which were the real Cadillac models IMO. Either sound better than the current-generation "thin-side" iMacs, but I digress....)

Software: VLC 2.2.8, VLC 3.0.1, and BPP 3.2.22 ...each is installed without any adjustments to settings. I.e., they're default.

FIle: ...our favorite Asgardian hero's latest (2017) romp, in lossless MPEG-H Part2/HEVC H.265, 2.35:1 aspect-ratio letterboxed in 16x9 resolution 3840x2160 (which is exactly 50% over the pixel dimensions of my 2011 iMac's non-Retina screen, so the video will be auto-shrunk during playback). The audio track is 7:1, and will have to play on our stereo speaker set-up without missing anything important in my subjective estimation.

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Features: VLC (clear winner)
* VLC: you can fiddle with just about anything, although important stuff (such as brightness) are sometimes not where you'd expect it to be (brightness is located under Windows > Video Playback, rather than Preferences or the Video menu entry).
* BPP: ...as bare-bones as you can get. It lacks even taken-for-granted things like double-clicking-to-maximize and scrollwheel-to-adjust-volume. But it DOES auto-crop letterbox "black-bars" (which Blu-ray raw files actually do have, and they are noticeable as dark gray w/grain rather than pure black); this is something that VLC does not do.

Video playback: BPP (clear winner)
* VLC 2.2.8 Weatherwax: ...immediately choked playing back a 50gb repack, and so is excluded from further comparison.
* VLC 3.0.1: ...serious frame-dropping, even in "slow" scenes, such as when the character Skurge is showing off his M16s to the ladies, and is basically standing still and pivoting on his heels. The gun-barrels noticeably jerk, painfully so, as frames are dropped. It seems as if the playback is being cut to only 12 or 8fps. Oddly, this frame-loss doesn't appear dependent on the busy-ness (or lack thereof) of action scenes, but by VLC's inability to decompress the .265 quickly enough regardless.
* BPP: ...smooth as butter. It also appears to be degraining by default (and that is very welcome).

Video clarity: BPP (clear winner)
* ...aside from framerate, VLC's video playback was too dark. It was hard to see much in the opening scene in Surtur's cave, for example. I had to adjust VLC's brightness from the default 50% up to 60%-ish in order to match BPP's apparent default level.

Audio: (both adequate, but fail in the same annoying way, so no winner)
* ...neither one of these players has built-in default audio-normalization auto-set during playback on two-speaker systems (which are still the overwhelming majority of devices in 2018). Normalization is "old" tech (it was included in AutoGK back in 2004, which is why the now-crude 700mb AVI "rips" of the era nevertheless tended to have excellent stereo tracks), and any machine made in the last ten years can pretty much do it on-the-fly using a miniscule amount of horsepower. But nope, no such luck: "Whisper" dialogue is inaudible, so you scrollwheel the volume up, then immediately have your head blown clean off by a gazillion-decibel "Inception" blare sound-effect. Ouch....

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Final tally: VLC still needs work in order to be an adequate player of lossless Blu-ray files, and it should be noted that 2160p "rips" are rapidly becoming the new norm for film files, replacing 1080p just about...now. (VLC 3 could be a decent player of lossy, compressed 2160p, but it should work to close the gap with BPP.)

vash1
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Re: Comparison: VLC vs BPP with BR repacks

Postby vash1 » 29 Mar 2018 13:33

Nice comparison! The video file was 10 bit HDR, right? Mediainfo will be useful here.

It will be very useful if you could add model of stock 2gb video card. Is it Intel or something more fancy?

mike18xx
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Re: Comparison: VLC vs BPP with BR repacks

Postby mike18xx » 02 Apr 2018 10:04

Toss "mid-2011 27" iMac" at Google, and top returns will take you straight to a site with the relevant specs. (This particular machine has an AMD Radeon HD 6970M with 2gb of VR. The "M" in the model stands for "mobile"; in other words, is a lower-horsepower card similar to those used in laptops -- that being the dirty little secret of iMacs: aside from a 3.5" drive, they're basically laptop guts behind a fancier monitor.)

MediaInfo:
Complete name (snip) 2160p.BluRay.REMUX.HEVC.DTS-HD.MA.TrueHD.7.1.Atmos-FGT.mkv
Format version Matroska : Version 4 / Version 2
File size : 58 GiB
Overall bit rate mode : Variable
Overall bit rate : 63.7 Mbps
Movie name : (name redacted) .2160p.BluRay.REMUX.HEVC.DTS-HD.MA.TrueHD.7.1.Atmos-FGT
Encoded date : UTC 2018-02-23 12:19:51
Writing application : mkvmerge v20.0.0 ('I Am The Sun') 64-bit
Writing library : libebml v1.3.5 + libmatroska v1.4.8

Video
Format : HEVC
Format/Info : High Efficiency Video Coding
Commercial name : HDR10
Format profile : Main 10@L5.1@High
Codec ID : V_MPEGH/ISO/HEVC
Bit rate : 49.2 Mbps
Width : 3840 pixels
Height : 2160 pixels
Display aspect ratio : 16:9
Frame rate mode : Constant
Frame rate : 23.976 (24000/1001) fps
Color space : YUV
Chroma subsampling : 4:2:0 (Type 2)
Bit depth : 10 bits
Bits/(Pixel*Frame) : 0.248
Stream size : 44.9 GiB (77%)

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The important take-away is this: Anybody telling you that these old machines with mediocre-for-their-day video-cards can't handle mere playback is full of it. --If one app can do it and another can't, it's not a hardware limitation.


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