Postby Sumoku » 03 Sep 2011 13:40
Let's face it: on a normal PC with a single-core processor and run-of-the-mill graphics card, VLC cannot cope adequately with most high-definition video sources (720p and above). We'd like it to; we earnestly wish it could ... but it can't. Worse still, even those with multi-core, all-singing, all-dancing systems, with high-end graphics cards and all the latest bells and whistles, have found themselves unable to play various types of HD file with VLC, a program that once upon a time seemed the only truly universal player/streamer/recorder/converter, but which is now showing its age, or perhaps its lack of serious development. (Something went wrong when Version 1.0 was introduced, promising so much and delivering rather less.)
Some dyed-in-the-wool fans of VLC may object to this response, but the truth must be recognized. I, too, am a long-time worshipper of the venerable VLC, but I am now waking up to the ugly reality that it is no longer the unassailable and uncontested world ruler it once was.
Alas, for now at least, the only solution for HD sources seems to be to turn to another player, such as Media Player Classic, or, better still, the newly released JetVideo. Neither of these has the fine-tuning options of VLC, but they can at least play almost all videos, including HD ones, at their full frame-rate, without stuttering or dropping frames or losing video-audio synchronization (a surprising and particularly distressing fault).
MPC will play some files that VLC struggles with, but it, too, has a hard time with some HD sources. JetVideo (freeware) is especially impressive, and, although it's not quite as flexible as VLC, it does allow lots of tweaking, such as cropping, resizing, repositioning, and changing of aspect ratio (alas, with mostly different keyboard hotkeys). The one significant thing it can't do is remove individual horizontal or vertical lines of pixels -- a very useful feature for adjusting those all-pervasive poorly made videos (especially on DVD) with jagged, uneven, or wrongly-coloured edges. Nevertheless, I recommend JetVideo wholeheartedly for HD video sources, which, in any case, generally have clean edges and no unnecessary black borders, and thus need little or no tweaking. Try it, if you haven't already, and you'll thank me.
By the way, I am not recommending that anybody abandon VLC altogether, but rather that we all begin to look elsewhere when VLC proves itself inadequate -- which, alas, seems to be ever more often of late.
PS I have no affiliation with COWON, the makers of JetVideo. I just found it by chance, this very week, and it has not disappointed me yet. Nevertheless, roll on the day that VLC returns as the true and only king!