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VideoLAN is a software development project comprising two multi-platform computer programs—VLC media player and VideoLAN Server (VLS)—and several audio/video decoding and decryption libraries. VideoLAN distributes free, open source software under the GNU General Public License.

The project began as a student endeavour at École Centrale Paris, and is now a multinational project with a development team spanning 20 nations.

VideoLANs software applications and libraries enable one to stream and transcode a wide variety of digital media formats, either from a local data source or across a computer network—without relying on external codecs. VLC and VLS support unicasting and multicasting over IPv6 and IPv4. VLC functions as a standalone media player capable of processing and transcoding digital audio and video signals.

VLC and VLS support a very large number of digital video and audio formats. Among the extensive list of video formats supported by VLC and VLS are: MPEG-1, MPEG-2, MPEG-4 (H.264, DivX, XviD, etc.), DVD, DVB-T, and DVB-S.

VideoLAN software is available for a wide variety of operating systems, including Microsoft Windows, Windows CE, FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Mac OS X, BeOS, Solaris, QNX, Sharp Zaurus, and numerous Linux distributions.

Projects


VideoLAN's major projects include:

=Applications
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=Libraries
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See also


External links


Free video software

VideoLAN | VideoLAN | VideoLAN | VideoLAN | VideoLAN | VideoLAN

 

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "VideoLAN".

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