Am I the only one that doesn‘t like VLC‘s new “feature“ where everytime you press the volume up button on your laptop, VLC increases it‘s own volume instead of letting the system increase the system volume, as it should? Similar for the volume down button. Com‘ on guys! It‘s good practice to have the application output sound at normal level (100%), and then use the system volume to control the sound level. I don‘t really see a reason for going against this. Can you imagine the average user, having his laptop‘s system volume set to something like 3%, launching a video with VLC and then wondering why the sound doesn‘t increase much , even after pressing the volume up button like 50 times? Instant usability nightmare. I ‘ve seen it happening, and I can tell you the user didn‘t like it.
Another “feature“ that isn‘t liked very much is the ability to change the volume using the scroll wheel. People turn their scroll wheels accidentally all the time, and hence VLC‘s internal volume changes accidentally all the time. The situation with trackpads on laptops is even worse. Again, i can tell you most of my friends that are VLC users don‘t like this. Other media players typically assign more “harmless“ actions to the scroll wheel, like jumping 3 seconds forwards/backwards, or better yet, don‘t assign an action to the scroll wheel.
Both of these features can be disabled from the preferences (btw, i had to disable them manually on all of my friends‘ PCs), so shipping the next version of VLC with them disabled should be really easy. My hope is that if lots of people express their opinion about this, VLC devs will respond to the (well-intended) feedback.