. Saves all your VLC Media Players so you can control as many as you want. Album art support. Lots of skins for personalisation. Supports VLC on Mac, Windows and Linux. Works with VLC versions 1.x and 2.x. Manually adding libraries supported. Supports iOS 6, iOS 7 and iOS 8. Universal app for iPhone, iPod Touch and iPad. To edit audio and video tags on VLC Media Player, Please follow the instruction listed below: 1) Open audio or video you want to edit the tag on VLC. 2 ) After opening the audio or video file, on the menu bar of VLC, Click on Tools and then select Media Information OR Press Ctrl + I on your keyboard.
VLC is a free, open source, cross-platform multimedia player that can play almost any multimedia file you throw at it. It’s become my multimedia player of choice because it free, light weight and versatile. But it’s not without it’s quirks. One problem I’ve had with it is that sometimes it will show incorrect album art. I've verified it's the app - the genres and album art show perfectly on everything else. I'm not so much worried about the album art as I am the extra genre it's showing - before I even copied my music to my phone, I changed all the MP3 tags to fit with the rest - and it's showing a genre tag from an earlier version of the file, that was never put on my phone. Devices and Mac OS X version. VLC media player requires Mac OS X 10.7.5 or later. It runs on any Mac with a 64-bit Intel processor or an Apple Silicon chip. Previous devices are supported by older releases. Note that the first generation of Intel-based Macs equipped with Core Solo or Core Duo processors is no longer supported.
A few weeks ago, we talked about the best apps for Apple TV and even showed you how to get a web browser on Apple TV. But apart from that, you’d also expect Apple TV to be a step ahead in the streaming section as well, wouldn’t you? If you want to play any video on your Apple TV without having to use the iPhone or iPad. Well, you all know the answer to that. Yes, its VLC media player for Apple TV. But have you ever been really able to use it seamlessly? VLC for Apple TV although a powerful app, is not very intuitive and often full of errors. So, we made this guide to help you make the most out of it.
VLC for Apple TV primarily offers three ways to stream both local and online media.
1. Local Network
The local network media support in VLC for Apple TV lets you stream media from a Mac or Windows computer connected to the same WiFi network. All you have to do is select any local device under Local Network on the top left of VLC app interface and enter your login credentials for the selected device. You can then simply browse through the device disk and play any media file. VLC can even play the file formats that can’t be played on your Mac or PC.
Problems faced:
- Device is not visible on Local Network.
- Cannot browse files even after using correct credentials on Mac.
Solutions:
- Make sure that your Mac or Windows is connected to the same wifi network or LAN as your Apple TV.
- After you log in with the credentials of your Mac on the Apple TV, go to the Sharing option under Settings on your Mac and check if File Sharing option is on from the menu on the left. Also, click on options under file sharing on the right and check both the boxes you find inside. This will make sure that your Mac is accessible from your Apple TV and all the media files on your Mac can be then played on your Apple TV.
2. Remote Playback
The Remote Playback option on VLC gives you access to videos stored on your other devices without having to use your Mac as a server. Just swipe up to the Remote Playback option on the VLC app on your Apple TV and click on ‘Enable Remote Playback’. You’ll see two links displaying on the screen, one is the local IP address and the other is the local network address. You just have to type either of these on your web browser on Mac which is connected to the same WiFi or LAN network.
Once you open either of the links, you’ll see a page that offers two modes of media access i.e. drag & drop, and a file picker dialogue box. This dialogue box that says ‘Enter URL here’ which is not to be confused with a Network URL. It is rather a local address it requires. All you gotta do is drag n drop a media file which will then start uploading on the Apple TV local memory and alternatively you can click on the ‘+’ sign to browse through your Mac’s memory disk and choose a file to upload.
The files you upload will then be temporarily saved on your Apple TV local memory and will be visible on the remote playback screen at the bottom. You can simply click on a file and your video will start playing on the Apple TV screen. The reason we say the term ‘temporarily saved’ is because these files can be automatically deleted by your Apple TV if it requires the space for itself but until then, you can view the saved files multiple times without having to face the problem of buffering or connecting to your Mac.
Problem Faced:
- Clicking on the ‘+’ icon doesn’t do anything.
- Copy pasting URL doesn’t bring up the video.
Solutions:
- There are two ‘+’ icons on the screen, you have to choose the top right one. Clicking on the ‘+’ icon in the center of the screen won’t do the job.
- You are probably copy-pasting a ‘web URL’ in the dialogue box which is not recognized by the remote playback feature. The URL here means a local address of your Mac and not a web URL. The simplest option is to drag & drop a media file in this window and it’ll automatically get uploaded to Apple TV local media.
Vlc Player Download
3. Network Stream
The Network Stream option is most tricky of all. This option lets you play media with the help of a network URL and support network streams, including HLS, MMS or RTSP. Meaning, if you have an FTP or a web server online, you can simply use the URL of a media file stored in that server and play it on your Apple TV. And as far as we heard it can support the URL from one of your cloud storages like Dropbox, OneDrive, etc. which didn’t actually work for us but you may give it a shot. Maybe VLC support team could be of some help too.
To insert a URL just swipe to the network stream option and type in the URL in the dialogue box. Apple TV remote app on your iPhone or iPad will be of great use in typing that tedious and long URL. Alternatively, you may also copy – paste the URL using the Apple TV remote app. Additionally, VLC will also help you get subtitles for the media you’re playing through online sources like OpenSubtitles.org
The great thing about this feature is that once the URL is used, it’ll always appear on the screen unless you delete it. Meaning that if you want to see your favorite movie or a personal video, again and again, you just have to click on the URL and it’ll pop-up on the Apple TV screen.
Problem faced:
- There is only a buffer sign on the screen after you insert a URL and the video doesn’t play.
- There are too many wrong URLs that are saved on the screen which you wanna get rid of.
Solutions:
Vlc Download Mac
- The reason why your video isn’t turning up on the screen after you have checked it on the web browser is that you have been inserting a web URL whereas VLC for tvOS only supports a media-specific URL which is super tricky to find. This media specific URL could be found on the page source and it’ll probably have an extension of a media file as a suffix. As for your server is concerned you’ll have to use a precise media specific URL for that too. Although VLC support team hasn’t come up with an absolute solution to this issue, we hope this could be made rather simpler or else VLC will lose its charm on Apple TV.
- To delete a previously used URL simply scroll down to it and press the ‘play-pause’ button on your Apple TV Siri remote to get options and press ‘delete’. You’ll have to do them one by one if you have many wrong URLs in the list.
Devices and Mac OS X version
VLC media player requires Mac OS X 10.7.5 or later. It runs on any Mac with a 64-bit Intel processor or an Apple Silicon chip. Previous devices are supported by older releases.
Note that the first generation of Intel-based Macs equipped with Core Solo or Core Duo processors is no longer supported. Please use version 2.0.10 linked below.
If you need help in finding the correct package matching your Mac's processor architecture, please see this official support document by Apple.
Web browser plugin for Mac OS X
Support for NPAPI plugins was removed from all modern web browsers, so VLC's plugin is no longer maintained. The last version is 3.0.4 and can be found here. It will not receive any further updates.
Older versions of Mac OS X and VLC media player
We provide older releases for users who wish to deploy our software on legacy releases of Mac OS X. You can find recommendations for the respective operating system version below. Note that support ended for all releases listed below and hence they won't receive any further updates.
Mac OS X 10.6 Snow Leopard
Use VLC 2.2.8. Get it here.
Mac OS X 10.5 Leopard
Use VLC 2.0.10. Get it for PowerPC or 32bit Intel.
Mac OS X 10.4 Tiger
Mac OS X 10.4.7 or later is required
Use VLC 0.9.10. Get it for PowerPC or Intel.
Mac OS X 10.3 Panther
QuickTime 6.5.2 or later is required
Use VLC 0.8.6i. Get it for PowerPC.
Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar
Use VLC 0.8.4a. Get it for PowerPC.
Vlc Player Mac Album Art Maker
Mac OS X 10.0 Cheetah and 10.1 Puma
Vlc Player Mac Album Artist
Use VLC 0.7.0. Get it for PowerPC.