
Libaacs 0.8.1 (not needed by me, because i use makemkv – the only one wiche works for me) Xmbc 13.2, old but worked here good kodi 16.1 more depends both versions work with

Xmbc & kodi if you like (take a look at the specs): Vlc 2.2.3 can be compile straight forward. Makemkv-bin (need for vlc or xmbc /kodi) to play crypted blu ray)

Makemkv-common (libraries in /usr/bin/lib64) I don’t know if your are interested, but you can find makemkv 1.9.10 with a little new structur:

Got in mind upgrade x264 can effect handbrake and xine in your repo. Rebuilt my vlc, mplayer & gstreamer-plugins-ugly against this libraries.Įverything works well. – ffmpeg 2.8.7 (I know ffmpeg 3 is there, but can break multimedia everywhere – must take a look). For the more severe media enthusiast, it's worth every penny.In the mean while I update straight forward my repo for tests in case of multimedia. There are free ways to watch Blu-ray discs, but you get what you pay for and much more besides with Cyberlink's excellent PowerDVD 19. It's a handy piece of software to have on a media PC, and you can even use it to pull in content from YouTube and Vimeo, including 360-degree video. It offers support for 3D Blu-ray as well as regular discs, high frame rate playback, HDR, casting, and 4K UHD Blu-ray.Īdditionally, PowerDVD will also play any of your ISO files from Blu-rays or DVDs directly, so you've got everything you need under one roof. If you're interested in something a little more feature-filled, there are numerous apps out there. Nevertheless, it's reliable and gets the job done. It also supports DVDs, and while you're not paying for it, you're only getting a bare-bones Blu-ray player. Perhaps a better -and also free- method is the Leawo Blu-ray player application. It's not necessarily the best option, but if you're a heavy VLC user already, it's at least an option. Natively, VLC won't just play your Blu-ray discs, so you'll need to do some tweaking.

The first option to mention is the good old Swiss Army Knife, VLC.
