Following the links, I don’t think we’re talking a simple  download and copy 
here, even if I had a working connection at the house.  So I guess that’ll go 
on the back burner for now.  With that, we turn to my other questions; how does 
one find the resume feature.  There’s supposed to be one.  I think it might be 
one of those boxes or buttons accessible with the Touch Cursor (yes, Virginia, 
this still pertains to JAWS), but the labeling is really poor to nonexistent, 
as stated before.  The Video Lan site reveals no manual, at least not to me.

Ted

From: Brian Vogel [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: Friday, December 18, 2015 10:13 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: VLC


As someone has already noted, VLC<https://www.videolan.org/> is an open-source 
media player that is available for every major platform out there:  Windows, 
Mac, & Linux.

Everything I can find indicates that the versions since 2.0.1 should have 
Blu-ray support shipped with them.  However, they also have a page that details 
libbluray and on that page they have this NB:

Most commercial Blu-Ray are protected by AACS<http://www.aacsla.com/> or 
BD+<http://www.bdplusllc.com/> technologies and this library is not enough to 
playback those discs.

People interested in AACS technologies should have a look at 
libaacs<https://www.videolan.org/developers/libaacs.html>.

People interested in BD+ technologies should have a look at 
libbdplus<https://www.videolan.org/developers/libbdplus.html>.



It appears that you may need to download one or both of those additional 
libraries and install them to allow VLC to play back commercial Blu-Ray discs, 
which is what's been under discussion here.



Brian

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