Blur Ray Player Osx
Download Blu-ray Playing software for Mac OS X Yosemite FREE to play Blu-ray movies on OS X Yosemite 10.10, which can not only play Blu-ray disc or its ISO files on Mac, but also on iMac, MacBook Air, MacBook Pro, Mac Mini, MacPro, etc with original quality. Can support all media formats of movie, video, audio, music and photo. It is multilanguage supported and easy handled with user-friendly interface. After adding DTS5.1 into it, Mac Blu-ray Player can bring your Mac to the most popular Blu-ray HD video enjoyment. The strong compatibility of Mac Yosemite Blu-ray Player supports Yosemite 10.10, Mavericks 10.9,,, Snow Leopard 10.6, 10.5. (Price: $35) (Free Download) Mac Blu-ray Player OS X Yosemite plays any commercial Blu-ray disc released in different regions. Only by live internet connection, can it load and play the Blu-ray video directly and play it without any quality loss.
Step 1: Insert your BD into the Blu-ray driver. Download and install the UFUSoft Mac Yosemite Blu-ray Player.
Then Run the program and two buttons are in the middle of the interface: “Open File” and “Open Disc”. Mac g tight eyez entertainment. Step 2: Click on the ‘Open Disc’ button and select the BD in the pop-up dialogue. After a couple seconds of loading, you can enjoy the Blu-ray movies on OS X Yosemite 10.10 freely.
It’s early days for Blu-ray ripping, especially on the Mac, but it does seem like there’s progress being made to let us enjoy our purchased movies on our other devices, regardless of format. Third Party Trademark Legal Notice: Mac, iMac, Macbook, OSX, Yosemite, Mavericks, Mountain Lion, Lion, Snow Leopard, Leopard, Tiger are trademarks of Apple Inc.
Otherwise, you can press “Open File” button to play Blu-ray ISO files or videos in other media formats. In addition, there are three advanced interfaces for advanced configurations for the output settings. These interfaces allow you to set parameters regarding title, subtitle and audio.
Now you can enjoy the high HD Blu-ray movie with super high audiovisual quality on Mac OS X 10.10 Yosemite. More info, please enter.
(Price: $35) (Free Download). Blu-ray Player Software(also known as Blu-ray media player), is a Blu-ray media library application used for playing Blu-ray discs, BDMV folders and Blu-ray ISO files on the computers running the Microsoft Windows and Mac operating systems. Blu-ray player software is more advanced than common media players, such as VLC media player, MPlayer and Windows Media Player, etc. It includes a large number of decoding and encoding libraries to read Blu-ray information, remove Blu-ray protection and support Blu-ray playback. Blu-ray player software can read Blu-ray disc information directly from the source disc and then play the blu-ray movie. Most of the Blu-ray player software can also play Blu-ray ISO files. Blu-ray player software mainly falls into two general categories: and, depending on the computer operating system it is running on.
VideoLAN has announced VLC 2.0 and the first release candidate is available to the public today. The biggest changes are in the OS X version but there are a few interesting changes in the Windows version as well, such as a 64-bit version and support for multiple video files inside RAR archives. The OS X version has a totally new user interface (see pictures below) along with Blu-ray playback support. Lets talk briefly about Blu-ray playback in OS X. Apple does not officially support Blu-ray as they provide no option for Blu-ray drives and the software support is poor to say the least. Blu-ray discs are encrypted so not just any player can play them. Since Apple doesn't support Blu-ray, there hasn't been a player that would enable one-click Blu-ray playback.
However, it's still been possible to rip and encode the video with the OS X version of MakeMKV, in which case the video will become a regular MKV file that is supported by various players. There is also but it's rather complicated and doesn't work with all discs.
VideoLAN is promising that VLC 2.0 will sport experimental Blu-ray playback support, but unfortunately we don't know yet how functional it is. Another big improvement in the OS X version is support for Lua-based extensions. There are at least a dozen different extensions but the most notable are probably subtitle finder and movie information. Update: The Blu-Ray support is limited decrypted media, which means commercial Blu-Rays with DRM won't work. Also, the OS X version doesn't support Blu-Ray at all yet, although VideoLAN is planning on porting it to the OS X version as well. The Windows version isn't getting any major new features; it's mainly under the hood changes but it already supports the features that are new in the OS X version.
VideoLAN is apparently also working hard on porting VLC 2.0 for iOS, which is a bit of surprise given that the original VLC app was pulled from the App Store about a year ago. The first release candidate can be downloaded and the complete change log is available. 22 Comments • - Monday, February 13, 2012 - VLC for iOS was useless (for video at least), since it didn't support hardware acceleration. It did everything in software, which meant that it choked on pretty much any media. My attempts to play a 720p video file (and this was a standard h.264/AAC file) on an iPhone 4S resulted in a handful of frames per second.