Before I propose improvements, I want to report that VLC 0.9.9 is my preferred means for listening to Internet Radio. It is the highest-quality product for that purpose. Other options have their own flaws: RealPlayer can't maintain a reliable connection (due to it's buffering bugs) more than about an hour, then it stops. Windows Media Player (V10 or V11) make everything sound like it's coming from a 2" speaker; no bass at all. QuickTime won't connect to many Internet Radion stations (especially the one's I listen to regularly). So, before I gripe, know this:
VLC Rocks!
Now, to my thoughts for your consideration:
Back in 2004 (
viewtopic.php?f=7&t=4658&p=14765&hilit= ... ure#p14765), Sigmund wrote "The playlist saving code in vlc is still quite imature..." Now, five years later, it's evident it hasn't improved much. So, here are my recommendations for improvement of the PlayList feature:
1. Provide a preference for where the Playlist file(s) are expected to reside; this solves the need for a "relative" path.
2. Provide a command-line option to Load the (specified) Playlist, irrespective of what other commands may also be issued. Specifically, requiring navigation of the menus to load a playlist, then have to open that list and select from it, is not a very friendly GUI.
3. Integrate the Playlist into the menus, much like a Favorites menu. The independent window for the Playlist isn't really necessary if one can open a default file name at program launch. What is currently in the separate window as a list of entries from the XSPF file could be integrated into the Playlist menu, showing the most-recently-loaded Playlist.
4. Fix the bug that crashes v0.9.9 after Playlist loading: If you click "Show Playlist" too soon, a fatal error is reported (which I'll separately post at trac.videolan.org). If the user waits long enough (usually 15-20 seconds), the error does not occur. Perhaps when the PlayList is Loaded (whether by menu, or my wish-listed command-line specification), why not just automatically show the list of entries at the end of the Playlist menu as "Favorites," and get rid of "Show Playlist" altogether.
Thanks for a great product, and for letting me offer ideas for how to make it better.
--Carol Anne