RealOne Player for Mac OS X 37
JakiChan writes "Finally Mac OS X users can view stunning RealAudio and RealVideo streams. OmniWeb doesn't seem to like it, but IE and Moz appear to play embedded streams just fine." Be careful, it's a beta.
Re:Be careful, it's beta? (Score:1)
Re:rm still alive? (Score:2)
Re:rm still alive? (Score:1)
Oh good, not too long now...
RealMedia hasn't been 'stunning' for a LONG time (Score:1)
Re:RealMedia hasn't been 'stunning' for a LONG tim (Score:1)
Especially check 56K speed demos...
Re:Stunning RealVideo? (Score:2)
Stunning? (Score:2, Funny)
"Stunning?" (Score:2, Informative)
Oh, please. Real is not "stunning," and their software is annoying.
Re:"Stunning?" (Score:3, Informative)
I don't use real. Ever. I'm trying to remember the last time I had to use it - DivX:)/Mpeg4 is just as small, and looks much better. Most movie trailers are done as Quicktime. I think the last time I *had* to use the Real format was to view the Kingdom Hearts trailer (stupid Squaresoft).
Real is just too annoying, between the "if you don't click the 50 billion options you'll be bugged every time you blink - oh, and we'll forget them later and take control of every friggin' media type on your computer! Thanks!", and the crappy video quality.
RealCrap (Score:2, Interesting)
And if you've even tried the RealOne player, it's the most intrusive player they've ever created. If anything, this is BAD news.
Re:RealCrap (Score:1)
Re:RealCrap (Score:2)
Except for the part about it being not very good. The Sorensen codecs (which is what everybody is really talking about when they complaing about QuickTime being proprietary) are the best low-bit-rate codecs out there, hands down. Proprietary isn't automatically bad.
Stuff that's proprietary but good is okay (Sorensen). Stuff that's open but not as good can sometimes be okay, too (MPEG-4). Stuff that's open and sucks... sucks (DiVX). And stuff that's proprietary and sucks also sucks (Real).
I'd draw a little ASCII-art graph, but I'm lazy.
still crap (Score:1)
Fire the Development Team (Score:2, Interesting)
Bah, what a load of shit. Now if only half of my Futurama collection (note: I didn't encode it) wasn't in realvideo format, or if there was some easy way to convert them to a *SANE* format (read. doesn't require a fucked up media player full of spyware and advertising).
Now, if they had a decent dev team, it might have been out there a just after OSX was released, and it might have become stable (dreaming), and it might have evolved into a DECENT format (impossible).
One less reason to use Classic (Score:2, Interesting)
disspelling a few myths (Score:2)
downsides:
The RM format continues to blow
upsides:
- full screen playback is smooth
- skipping around the file (to different times) is perfectly smooth, snapping there instantly, rather than trying to rebuffer the whole damn file
- no ads (at least in the beta)
- doesn't try to hijack all your file formats... i actually had to tell Finder to use
- no other crap all over the place, its JUST the RealOne player
Re:disspelling a few myths (Score:3, Insightful)
Yes, Real took WAY too long to release this, but hey, its out now, do download it and try it out!
Re:disspelling a few myths (Score:1)
Stunning indeed.
Real is need! (Score:1)
Real exclusively. For example MLB. I love to listen to baseball games and now I can without using the flacky classic player. Plus this version is great: a single file, no installing required, no ads, and it is very fast. I have been cursing Real for the last two years, now they have earned a BJ, line up and lets get "Real"
Re:Real is needed! (Score:1)
And beta or not, it's playing very nicely with the other children. The frame rate is quite nice on this old Wallstreet, and the sound quality is fine. (Good enough that a barking dog in one news story got my black lab yapping for a good five minutes, anyway.)
My real beef is that most of the clients I develop for insist on it
Re:Has anyone actually used the thing?! (Score:1)
Much nicer than I'd expected. (Score:1)
Admittedly, I usually use RealPlayer very little; song previews on Amazon and the odd video file on LimeWire are usually it. But the experience is so improved, that I won't hesitate to use it on other web sites.
I'm Real glad it's here, actually (Score:1)
At least Real is nice enough to support most OS platforms. That's more than I can say for Brand M and Brand A, which ignore Linux.