Postby kifox » 12 Aug 2017 23:47
Greetings all. Old guy who has been tinkering with video for years but new to this forum. Please pardon for arriving late to this thread. I too recently began experiencing difficulty playing recent BR discs from my library. For years, I have been able to watch my personal copies of movies on BR and DVD by adding the commonly available 'libaacs.dll' into VLC's program folder, and updated versions of 'keydb' into a VLC directory in Common Files within Program Files. I had no trouble with this former method until a couple months ago. I've attempted updating to VLC 2.2.6, along with the most recently available 'keydb' but nothing works anymore. That's when I dug a little further on videolan.org and noticed the three supplemental branches mentioned in this posts title. I realize they are offered by third parties, and official response here may be limited. But as the original poster asked, and unless I'm missing something otherwise obvious, the answers have yet to be presented anywhere. I am just as interested in how these three 'libraries,' 'plugins,' or whatever they are called, need to be installed. Every site, including authors appear to offer differing, vague procedures. Example: as for installing the 'libaacs-0.9.0' package (after unpacking for its compressed archive,) should one simply place that entire folder into VLC's program folder? I have used 'paid' BR-capable players and they all fail to consistently perform. That's why I always end back with good ol' VLC. Yes, the legal issues prevent the larger open-source community from providing clear guides, but come on... this is getting ridiculous. My only dependable option at this point seems to be the purchase of a stand-alone BR player for $75-375 and pray I can use it more than a few years. I prefer using my PC for just about everything I do for work, play, and entertainment, but perhaps it's time to throw it all away.