We learned recently that VLC was getting a significant update, with an all-new and more modern VLC 4 user interface. But a sneak peek at the Linux version unfortunately doesn’t look good. It does ...
VLC's interface is ugly and dated and overcomplicated for the vast majority of use cases. The new player looks excellent and more like a modern media player while still retaining all of the core VLC ...
The popular video player, VLC is now coming with a new user interface and a more modern outlook. Furthermore, VLC's developer VideoLAN is working on bringing a web-based player for users. As reported ...
During a recent talk at the FOSDEM conference, VLC‘s lead developer gave us a sneak peek at changes coming to the open source, cross-platform media player in the coming year. Under the hood VLC 4.0 ...
is a reporter with five years of experience covering consumer tech releases, EU tech policy, online platforms, and mechanical keyboards. VLC’s developer VideoLAN gave the world a peek at what this new ...
Something to look forward to: Ranking as one of the best pieces of free software of all time, VLC has shared some of the features coming to the next major version. A redesigned UI and addition of ...
Michael is a born Texan and a former graphic designer. He's been covering technology in general and Android in particular since 2011. His interests include folk music, football, science fiction, and ...
The popular open-source VLC media player has released a significant update with an interface refresh for Windows, Linux, and Unix, improved playlist and media library tools, and a whole lot more. The ...
Windows/Mac/Linux: VLC 0.9.3, the bug-fixed, updated version of our favorite cross-platform, hardly-ever-fails media player, is available for download. New to this version are a revamped interface and ...
I've tried most of the mainstream media players and disliked all of them for one reason or another. Windows Media Player irritates me by not allowing me to uninstall it, and with its baffling ...
And while this is a pretty egregious example, VLC 4.0 is hardly the only interface taking this general design direction. I'd really like to at least understand why so much of modern UI design seems so ...