Postby Evil Paragon » 03 Aug 2018 05:38
It's a free software. Why not let people get damaged headphones. It's their fault, they did it. It's not like 200% is a default.
My audio is turned up to 100% everywhere, except my headphones which I consider to be the master control.
Everything is so concerned with safety these days, my god. If my computer won't let me turn up the volume to ear hurting levels, and my headphones won't let me, and it seems like VLC is making a move to not letting me, then what happens when all three of them combine and I just need it a little bit louder? TVs for decades have NEVER had 100 volume be comfortable, normally 20-30 on TVs is where most people have audio. Yet I find myself on the computer having to turn everything up to 100% to hear, with my earphones sitting at 70%. What happens though when I need 140% to hear? 70% (Headphones) of 100% (Windows) of 100% (VLC) is only 70%. Sure, I put my headphones on 100%, so now it's a full 100%, yay, I can hear "safely", but what if I'm not wearing my headphones? What if they're next to me?
To be clear, 100% VLC is what I use when I watch videos with my headphones on, I only put it on 200% when I take my headphones off. I however watch VLC videos rarely in the day, and primarily watch all of them as I fall to sleep, meaning no headphones.
Safety of me and my property is my responsibility. No one can sue Videolan for damaged speakers, headphones, or ears when it was the user that turned it up to 200%.
If it is the company's belief that 200% is bad, then why not remove it as a whole? I definitely don't want that, but why take away 200% as a remembered setting if the company's not going to remove it entirely?
People live in unique scenarios, more people would prefer a VLC that remembers what its volume was the last time it was open than one that has a "default volume" capped at 125 or something, because there are two types of users. Those that listen to stuff louder than 125, and those that don't. Both of those types of users are accounted for in a remember system, whereas the former group is entirely excluded when there's a default setting that's capped at 125. Hell, it could even be a setting, do you want VLC to open at the same volume it opened last time, or to open with a default preset volume every time? Chrome's been doing it for years, you can either open Chrome to the last webpages you had open, or Chrome can open to a homepage you set before.
And if videolan is worried, just through a warning up if the user attempts to go above 125 and have a checkbox on the warning that says "do not warn me again".