View VLC, the Cross-Platform Video Player

Learn how to watch multimedia content with VLC, a video player you can use on Linux, Windows, and Mac.

There are a number of media players available for Linux, each with its respective pros and cons. Because all media players under Linux rely on basically the same codecs to play back video and audio, the media player you choose is largely a matter of taste—which media player fits best with how you watch video. VLC has gained popularity, on one hand, because of its simplified and easy-to-use interface and, on the other hand, because of its cross-platform nature. VLC has clients available for Windows, Mac OSX, various distributions of Linux, BSD, Solaris, and other platforms. If you use a number of platforms on a daily basis, it can be nice to have a single application that runs across all of them for your video needs.

VLC also touts a number of other features such as video streaming services, which I cover in “Stream Video with VLC” [Hack #85] . This hack, however, discusses the basics of installing and using VLC to watch video.

The first step to use VLC is to install the software. Visit http://videolan.org/ vlc and scroll down to see the list of Linux distributions with precompiled binaries. Click the icon for your distribution and follow the installation instructions on that page. Some major distributions do prepackage VLC binaries, but the VLC installation page for those distributions will let you know whether or not you can use your distribution’s ...

Get Linux Multimedia Hacks now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.