Postby degarb » 28 Jan 2023 16:20
YES! I think this needs to be at the top of the vlc to do list. It is 2 years, since this person requested.
I would think that since Exhale, FDK, Foobar2000, are all open source, VLC could simply grab the foobar fdk.dll and be up and running, playing xHE-AAC within an hour by someone who knows what ever computer language VLC uses. I do not , and most users are not programmers.
Compelling reasons I have found, are articulated below:
I have hundreds of hours of speech. I chose Exhale xHE-AAC over Opus, because the highs are better and Opus has an annoying artifact (grain in the high peaks, which sounds like a static noise profile that was removed), which is impossible to remove using any opus setting, and is audible on nearly every device I play it on. I found it reminiscent to me of someone with a chest rattle. Exhale just sounds cleaner. Only on one device did Exhale sound a hint like the player was in the bottom of a metal garbage can, which if preferred by me to the chest rattle.
Also, when I serve these audio files via webserver, the xHE-AAC play from the Chrome and Firefox browser on android, allowing a preview. The Opus require downloading the entire files which are typically 10 to 40 hours, which is 120 megs at 20 to 24 kps. So, no preview is possbile with opus.
I am using foobar with the fdk plugin, but I find it annoying that vlc doesn't support the best audio codec that is now the standard of 3 out 4 of the big operating systems. Even windows 11 media player plays xHE-AAC. But, on the windows 10 machine, when I am using foobar2000 for conversion, I don't think it is possible to play audio. At any rate, vlc is my default player, and I can't simply click files to play, and must open up my launcher, launch foobar, then drag and drop my audio files to play, and it doesn't even show the attached art or have any interesting visualizations. Plus it can't remember my place in a 40 hour audio book when the power goes out.