Hi,
I think I found a funny but serious glitch: Audio file playback is changing the playrate slightly upwards at times. Being a musician, I'm probably a bit more sensitive to variations in pitch and wondered why VLC sounds sometimes like a broken record player. Now I had this phenomenon again on the 4th computer with a clean VLC 0.8.6i install and decided to document that.
I recorded a 2 minute test tone in my DAW software and rendered it as MP3 (160kBit/s CBR). Then I played the file back in VLC and recorded its output to the next track in the DAW. Here's what it sounds if I playback the two tracks together at the same level:
http://shup.com/Shup/60333/VLC_TestTone_1k_Drift.mp3
Here's the nominal pitch of the test tone (MIDI playable tone generator, hence not exactly 1kHz) played back by VLC:
And here is what happens after a while on VLC playback:
As you can see, the pitch drifts up by 10Hz which is not neglectable.
This does not happen always and it comes at random, but always somewhat into the file, mostly near the end. And it drives me nuts when it happens. I'm sure the most basic job - playing back audio files (it happens on WAV as well) - is supposed to be working flawlessly and hence I call it a "serious glitch". Since it happens on Windows XP here I posted it in this forum, I hope that was right.
XPenetrator