I get why Dolby wants money for their patent. I get why Apple pushed VLC out of the App Store. And I get why the VideoLAN team had to remove the codec to allow the app to be back and move forward. All that is good despite the moaners which will always complain no matter what's the reasoning behind a change. What I don't really get is why the iOS VLC team had to be sneaky about this change. The iOS 2.4.1 release notes say nothing about this change (see below). If they would have warned users then I would have sided with. But this major oversight is too big to be forgiven even if it was an honest mistake, which I highly doubt. The App is going to get a lot of 1 star reviews and mine is just one of them. If you make a difficult decision you got to be honest and open about it. Just saying "complain to dolby and apple" is not good enough. Even if you make a free product.Again, complain to dolby and apple. This is not our fault at all.
I agree with Turribeach. I'd spare the $5 in a blink for an In App Purchase, for THIS particular product. And that's saying something because I really don't like In App Purchase(s) on the whole.Hi Felix,
Thanks for that, I can see the new release notes in the App Store now. I for one have disabled automatic updates and always read the release notes. I do agree that most people don't do that. But that's their decision so they can't complain about deciding to not read release notes or letting iOS apply an automatic update they may not like.
Not sure why In App Purchase may not work, only people that pay for the in app purchase should incur a license fee for the patent holder, assuming the patent holder is happy with that arrangement. I would also imagine that In App Purchases could be a way to give you guys something back for the development of VLC although I am not sure if Apple allows donations as In App Purchases. I will be happy to donate $ 5 as I use VLC every day. Another way to get around this is to allow VLC to read the codec from a user uploaded file (aka plug-in model). Lots of products have taken this sort of approach to avoid legal threats when using patented software. Linux and DVD decoding drivers is a good sample.
As for this, I suggest writing an actual bug report atSome things still need to be fixed like the message we get returning on the app prompting to send crash report
When will have new version ?Because patents expireI cant believe people are complaining about a free app. These devs dont owe us anything.
Jean Baptiste - I do have a question....
If dolby and apple were the reason we dont have AC3 and you say it will be resolved in future release, why would apple and dolby relent for future release, if they held things up this time?
Thanks.
My tip.Add custom codec secretly. file into the VLC iOS fold via iTunes. Unofficially!!We don't have a fixed date at this point.
Why?? Designed VLC iOS for external libraries. 1 player in app store has this functions. Really good idea. Can try it yourself.This is not feasible because you cannot load external libraries on iOS.
See pm message. And good player or.Which player would that be?
Thanks- $10 here in the US. I'm guessing DTS/AC3 support for iOS VLC is unlikelyI've used infuse which seems to work. It was a paid for app I think I paid £5 (really needed something while VLC was removed!)
Return to “VLC for iOS, iPadOS and Apple TV”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 28 guests