Mine is Local Send which is a FOSS alternative similar to air drop that works across a variety of devices.

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8 points

media player that plays almost everything

What doesn’t it play?

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15 points
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It can’t go back one frame at a time yet has no problem going forward at the same pace.

Pathetic.

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3 points

Are there any FOSS apps that can do this? MPV can move frame by frame but moving back is so unusably slow.

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1 point

OpenShot. But that’s a video editor and not a conventional video player per se.

https://www.openshot.org/

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2 points

Depends on the machine and… maybe other things. I used to think that, too, but on my current machines I can step backwards just fine.

It’s probably a much more intensive operation requiring processing a lot of the file from before and throwing away current buffers or something.

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6 points

The Stargate SG-1 DVDs for some reason. All others I tried work fine.

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1 point

Corrupted files

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2 points

It’s not good at displaying anime fansubs if they have complex typesetting. I have to use MPC-HC + madVR. Sadly those fansub styles are a dying breed…

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2 points

Banjo

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7 points

I discovered that VLC isn’t so good at playing .flv files. This are video files that are saved in the Adobe Flash Video container format. I have some episodes from cartoon series which I downloaded years ago. Sometimes there are no playback issues with VLC, but sometimes the audio track is delayed. For this reason I have installed IINA, but I like VLC’s user interface better.

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8 points

Thankfully, vlc’s audio offset function is very easy to quickly adjust and save. As long as the audio delay is consistent you can adjust it pretty quickly.

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1 point

Weirdly enough I often find things playing back better in IINA than VLC even though as I understand it they’re basically the same under the hood. I also find the reverse occasionally as well.

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4 points
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The funny thing is that said .flv files could be played with VLC without any issue at the time I acquired them. I downloaded a bunch of cartoon episodes in this file format back in 2010 (?) when once-click-hosters like Megavideo were a big thing then. I was able to play them with the then current version of VLC without any problems.

Since then there were several updates with VLC and some time along the way it suddenly didn’t work that good anymore. I might add that this file format is not very common today (it was, when Adobe Flash was still around), so today there might be no incentive to maintain any old codecs for these type of files any longer.

When it gets worse with dwindling playback compatibility I probably have to acquire these files with a more recent file format (e.g. .mp4) in the future.

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