Vlc For Mac Os Snow Leopard



  1. VLC media player is a highly portable multimedia player for various audio and video formats (MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4, DivX, mp3, ogg, etc) as well as DVDs, VCDs, and various streaming protocols. It can also be used as a server to stream in unicast or multicast in IPv4 or IPv6 on a high-bandwidth network.
  2. The last OpenOffice version supporting Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger), 10.5 (Leopard), 10.6 (Snow Leopard) is OpenOffice 4.0.1. Hardware Requirements ΒΆ CPU: Intel Processor.

Vlc 64bit free download - VLC Media Player, Portable VLC, VLC RAR-Loader, and many more programs. Apple Mac OS X Snow Leopard. Upgrade your Mac to Mac OS X Snow Leopard. Free Editors' rating.

Devices and Mac OS X version

VLC media player requires Mac OS X 10.7.5 or later. It runs on any 64bit Intel-based Mac. 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.

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

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

Vlc Mac Download

QuickTime 6.5.2 or later is required

Download Vlc Media Player Mac Os X

Use VLC 0.8.6i. Get it for PowerPC.


Vlc Os X

Mac OS X 10.2 Jaguar

Vlc

Use VLC 0.8.4a. Get it for PowerPC.


Mac OS X 10.0 Cheetah and 10.1 Puma

Use VLC 0.7.0. Get it for PowerPC.

VLC 2.0.1 Crashing in Mac OS X 10.6.8 Snow Leopard

I recently upgraded VLC 1.1.12 to VLC 2.0.1 through the VLC menu. Upon launch the application tried rebuilding the font database, and crashed. I restarted VLC and it opened the VLC medial player window that looks like a media browser. I selected My Videos and the application unexpectedly quit. I trashed all my VLC-related preferences from ~/Library/Preferences including a folder named org.videolan.vlc and a plist named org.videolan.vlc.plist. I launched the application and it crashed again.

1. Launch VLC 2.0.1 from /Applications
2. Select any movie [.avi, .flv, .mp4] or a folder from the media browser. These are local files on the hard drive.

Trashed all VLC related preferences from the user's home directory.

Ran Software Updates and installed Security Update 2012-001, Version 1.1.

Trashed VLC application and downloaded the full VLC app. Opened the disk image and copied the .app to the /Applications folder.

I also trashed ~/Library/Caches/fontconfig and tested again. No change.
Crash text provided in text file below.
Video also provided below.
Last Update: The new Standard User account had no problems playing from external media. I thought this was a font-related issue since VLC took a long time building the font cache. I had already isolated the fonts for a prior issue (not related to VLC), and it turns out I only had a handful of standard Microsoft fonts. I removed those fonts and the issue persisted. I knew the issue was related to my home directory. I removed all the movies from the ~/Movies folder and placed them in a temporary folder. Launched VLC, and no crashes! I pinpointed the crashes to a single Windows Media ASF file. The file plays fine with Windows Media Player 9 for Mac.
Resolution: Isolate crashes to a specific file in the ~/Movies folder.
Steps to solve:
2. Create a new folder in your home folder. I named my new folder: Movie_archives
3. Open your user account's Movie folder. Move all your movies from your Movie folder to the Movie_archives folder
4. Open VLC. If VLC no longer crashes, then you'll have to find the movie that is causing the application to crash.
Isolation steps:
2. Move 1 file from the Movie_archives folder to the Movies folder
4. Move 1 more file from the Movie_archives folder to the Movies folder
5. Launch VLC. Repeat the steps until you find the 1 file that is causing VLC to crash.
Uploaded file that was causing VLC 2.0.1 to crash shortly after launching.

Intro_to_Christ.wmv
VLC_2012-04-02-163656_mario-garcias-imac.crash
VLC_2012-04-03-130246_iMacIntel.crash
VLC_2012-04-03-130525_iMacIntel.crash
VLC_2012-04-03-131111_iMacIntel.crash
vlc_201_crash.m4v