Author Topic: Open Source Giant VLC Mulls BitTorrent Streaming Support ($10,000 "Bounty")  (Read 179 times)

Offline menotu

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Ernesto - February 11, 2013 - torrentfreak

Open Source Giant VLC Mulls BitTorrent Streaming Support

With more than a billion downloads since its first release, VLC is one of the most popular media players around. It’s free, open source, and can play virtually every video file available. In the near future it could also become the first mainstream media player with the ability to download and stream torrent files. A group of VLC supporters has put up a $10,000 bounty for the developer who can deliver the right code.

VideoLAN’s VLC media player is installed on the PCs of millions of Internet users.

It’s widely regarded as the best tool to play videos and audio in just about any format found anywhere on the web. When something can’t be played, VLC almost always provides the answer.

In the near future the media player may add a feature that will increase its appeal even more – the capability to stream BitTorrent files.

A group of VLC fans and supporters have been discussing this idea with the VideoLAN team, who say that there’s a good chance that a BitTorrent module will be added if the code is right.

TorrentFreak spoke with the group, which includes successful Internet entrepreneurs, and they explained that making VLC BitTorrent-compatible could change the lives of millions. Instead of downloading files through a traditional BitTorrent client, VLC should be able to stream the media directly from a magnet or torrent link, if the bandwidth is sufficient.

Last week they posted their project on Elance, putting up a $10,000 bounty for the developer who can deliver the right code.

The developer should submit a working patch for VLC that lets a user open a torrent file or ‘magnet link’ in VLC, and start watching any media files within VLC after a minimal delay,” the project description reads.

VLC is open to the idea of implementing and maintaining BitTorrent support, but cautions that there’s a high standard to meet.

Commenting on the plan, VideoLAN’s Jean-Baptiste Kempf told TorrentFreak that the idea to make VLC BitTorrent compatible isn’t new. Over the years several developers have submitted code to do this, but thus far none matched the high quality requirements

“So far, all BitTorrent related modules for VLC have been of low code quality and have not been merged. We really care about code quality and maintenance, since we are not many in the VLC project,” Kempf said.

Elance, project

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Offline Just17

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I wonder how successful this idea would be ........  it is my understanding that using a torrent client, bits of the target file are downloaded but not in consecutive parts as would be required to view the file as a stream.

Changing the use of the torrent to download in specific order all the 'parts' of the file could meet with a lot of problems I suspect .....   not least of which might be the uploading capability of (maybe) a limited number of seeders for specific parts - if all seeders do not have 100% of the file.

It will be interesting to watch ......  and see if they can successfully do it.   ;)


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Offline Just17

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« Last Edit: February 12, 2013, 07:15:40 AM by Just17 »
MLUs rule the roost!

Linux XPS 3.4.48-pclos1.bfs  64 bit
Intel Core2 Quad CPU Q9450 @ 2.66GHz
4 GB RAM
MCP51 High Def Audio
GeForce GTX 550 Ti
PHILIPS  ‎DVD+-RW DVD8701
‎Logitech ‎BT Mini-Receiver
Afatech DTT