Practical? Yes. Acceptable - maybe not? That is a 17MB download is in the days of Word-of-Warcraft Patches is nothing, and you "could" go to the trouble of embedding the app and installing it from Rev. Given the regular updates, ease of install, and general usefulness of VLC - it is really better just to get the user to install it themselves with a provided link from your app. Support issues are reduced that way.
Acceptable? Well it's not really "expected" - particularly if you charge for the app - to make your app so "visibly" dependent on another app in this way. So with regard to your customers, you have more of a marketing problem than a practical one. AFAIK - VLC on OSX is entirely contained in the bundle, The same may be true for windows (the Linux version most probably places one or more executable in the relevant bin directory). Generally it is a very clean install, but as I haven't gone down the route of embedding it myself I'd have to say I don't really know. There are no cleanly seperable command line components - it's all part of the same thing. It is for these reasons bundling Mplayer, or FFMPEG with your app is often preferred to using VLC. But it's only VLC that you get everything with (including live streaming and screencasting) - for which you pay the 17mb download price. 2009/8/1 Richard Miller <[email protected]> > But is it practical to have the core VLC application (and associated files, > whatever they may be) installed on the users computer, along with a Rev app? > The VLC download is 17 MB, but perhaps that includes many files not needed > to actually run the commands in command-line mode. _______________________________________________ use-revolution mailing list [email protected] Please visit this url to subscribe, unsubscribe and manage your subscription preferences: http://lists.runrev.com/mailman/listinfo/use-revolution
