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Cyberlink powerdvd 14 3d
Cyberlink powerdvd 14 3d













cyberlink powerdvd 14 3d
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CPU utilization with any reasonably modern processor is quite low, even for 4K videos, so your system will remain responsive during movie playback. PowerDVD is a now a much more tightly coded program player that uses hardware assist whenever possible. That finally seems to be a thing of the past. Not because of its now shrinking list of peccadilloes, but because it has never been particularly stable and tended to hog system resources. PowerDVD has never actually stayed on my system for long after a review.

cyberlink powerdvd 14 3d

And, although it seems that everyone has gotten over 3D for the third time in my lifetime, PowerDVD supports it in both video and photos.

cyberlink powerdvd 14 3d

MPC-HC and VLC can do that only if you first mount the ISO as a virtual drive using something like Elaborate Bytes' CloneDrive.

In addition to the ability to play commercial Blu-ray discs, PowerDVD 15 Ultra also has a driver that will allow you to play ISO rips of said discs. The only issue is that not-being-able-to-apply Dolby or TrueTheater Surround thing to all files types. About the only files it didn’t pick up on were RealMedia and Opus. Windows Media Player with the LAV filters, Media Player Classic- Home Cinema, and VLC (VideoLAN Player) all played these files with nary a hitch.Īudio file support is much better, with PowerDVD recognizing and playing wave files up to 96kHz/32-bits, 5.1 and 7.1 surround, MP3 and AAC, as well as Windows and Apple Lossless, FLAC, and APE. The DVD rip when launched from the IFO file played fine. Also, navigating an individual VOB file from a DVD rip hung the player. It handles all the advanced stuff, including everything HD, 4K, and HFR (High Frame Rate), but just some of its fails were FLV with the Sorenson Spark codec, a MPG-PS file with AVC video, Quicktime 6 (Road Pizza), and Ogg Theora. Two of my continuing gripes about PowerDVD are that it’s a pay program that doesn’t understand DirectShow filters, and that it lacks support for a number of legacy codecs. Sadly, that list doesn’t include FLAC, my go-to codec for all things classical. Alas, they only work on a subset of the file types that PowerDVD supports. Though the effects are a bit hard to find (Setting/Player Settings/More Audio), you can now apply Dolby Virtual Speaker and TrueTheater Surround to your tunes. The Cyberlink folks have finally made PowerDVD nearly the equal of Microsoft's Windows Media Player and Apple's QuickTime player for augmenting music playback.

It’s like turning up the saturation control in other players, but it’s smarter in that it leaves skin tones alone, so there’s no spray-tan effect. The biggest add for version 15 of PowerDVD is some very tasteful color enhancement, called, of course, TrueTheater Color. PowerDVD made even this high bit-rate, 1080 copy of The Incredibles look sharper and more vivid. There’s even after-the-fact video stabilization for home movies. The effect on older movies and animated movies is startling-and to be honest-addictive. PowerDVD 15 renders movies better than anything else available, and does so without the fuss other players require on the user’s part, such as loading shaders (FX), tweaking contrast and saturation, and so on. I’m being picky, but as I’ve already mentioned, there are other less-than-intuitively placed options, too. For instance, there’s a main heading that says “playlists,” but those are only for music files. The PowerDVD librarian is easy to use and offers a battery of cataloging features, but it’s a quirky in spots.

To that end, Cyberlink provides both remote-control and playback apps for both Android and iOS.

cyberlink powerdvd 14 3d

PowerDVD also features a “cinema mode”, aka a 10-foot interface i.e., an interface that can be controlled with a remote control from a distance. In PowerDVD 14, this proceeded with reckless abandon, sometimes choking your system. On the other hand, Cyberlink has backed off on the automatic cataloging of files. I clicked the wrong "close" button more than once. Also, because of the ultra-thin borders and dead-center alignment of stacked dialogs, it can be difficult to tell which elements belong to which. While you’re playing music, for instance, the EQ is readily available, but the effects are two dialogs deep. It’s easy to navigate the main window and major features, but options could be better organized and placed. PowerDVD is rendered in a riff on the Windows 8/Metro style, which works quite nicely with Windows 10, 8, and 7.















Cyberlink powerdvd 14 3d