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Menneisyys2

macrumors 603
Original poster
Jun 7, 2011
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In many of my old(er) articles, I've praised BUZZ Player. ($2.99) and BUZZ Player HD. ($2.99). Up until 4.0.2, which royally messed up the MKV playback capabilities of the player, making it one of the worst choices for MKV playback.

(A quick note: note the full stop after the name of both the iPhone and the iPad-specific apps. I've explained the cause for this seemingly amusing name in an earlier article.)

In the meantime, (then) complete newcomers to the iOS multimedia player scene, nPlayer ($4.99; last review) has become the most important “go to” player for everyone looking for MKV playback and not wanting to play back DTS audio.

Since 4.0.2, slowly and steadily, BUZZ Player (HD). has become increasingly better and better. As of 4.1.0 (early 2013), it regained DTS audio and, with series 5 (late 2013), also AC3 audio. (DTS and AC3 are almost exclusively the format of audio tracks in MKV files – even of those you save from your Blu-ray discs youself, with MakeMKV, the de facto DVD and Blu-Ray rip utility.) 5.0.2 has been released recently:


(Click for the original-sized image! You'll need to do it at least with the images below, should you really want to be able to compare the demonstrated resolution difference. They aren't really conveyed with size- and quality-reduced thumbnails.)

Unfortunately, apart from the complete lack of AC3 support, the MKV support of 4.1.0 was still full of bugs. For example, it's still unable to even start playing back an MKV file with an AAC audio track in it.

As has already been hinted on, series 5 turned out to be much more MKV-compliant than the previous one. It no longer refuses to play back MKV files with AAC audio and, which is even more important, it reintroduced AC3 audio. In addition, its DTS MKV playback is certainly more fluid than that of

- VLC (review)
- CineXPlayer (review)
- the jailbreak-only RushPlayer+

Unfortunately, it has also introduced a major bug not present in series 4: lack of Retina screen support on both iPhones (plus iPod touch devices) and iPads.

On the former, MKV's are played back using low resolution on Retina devices (iPhone4+, iPod touch 4+), rendering the resolution plain awful. An example showing the playback screen of the standard ISO 12233 test chart in an MKV container:




Fortunately, it has no such problems with iOS-native files (MP4, MOV, M4V). With them, it looks as it should (read: high-resolution):




Unfortunately, the iPad version is even worse. It just doesn't make use of the Retina screen. Everything is scaled down to XGA resolution – even iOS-native video files. Obviously this isn't a problem on a non-Retina iPad (iPad 1, 2 and the first iPad Mini) but it is on a Retina one. This is how it renders anything:




4.1.0 has no such problems. That is, it renders in high-resolution:

- on iPads, everything

- on iPhones, not only native files (MP4, MOV, M4V), but also MKV's.

An example of this:




Similarly, on small-screen devices, MKV playback is also flawless under the old, 4.x series – unlike with the new.

Of course, as has been previously explained, it can only play back MKV's with DTS audio but noting else - no AAC, no AC3. However, as has been explained above, if you only want to play back DTS MKV's, it's considerably a better choice than the very few other, MKV-capable players (VLC, the in no way recommended CineXPlayer, RushPlayer+).

I've mailed the developer on these issues. I don't have high hopes for an answer, though, given that he has left my previous mail, immediately sent after finding 4.0.2 practically useless, unanswered.

Still Image Support

In an earlier article, I've explained in which cases you can find the still image support of this player indispensible, particularly if you jailbreak and want to quickly review images on external storage. The native image support of iFile (the best jailbreak file handler tool) is very bad; this player has, on the other hand, always pretty good still image support. And this has been greatly enhanced in 5.0.2.

As you can see in the screenshots of my just-linked article, previous versions have had adequate image controls – but in no way did they allow for generating and displaying thumbnails of them, something the stock Photos app has always done greatly on iOS. A screenshot of the image handler of 4.1.0:



As you can see, it's basically the same as that of 4.0, released and reviewed in Sept/2012.

And this is how the now-released 5.0.2 looks like (note the thumbnail quick selector widget at the bottom and the thumbnail-full size switcher in the top right corner):




Note that the screen resolution problems don't apply to still mode, which can easily be seen if you simply compare the legibility, pixelization etc. of the two screenshots above. They show the original image being rendered at exactly the same resolution.

This is the also brand-new thumbnail mode, after enabling it using the top right icon:




All in all, if you jailbreak, often need to review still images particularly on external media and aren't afraid of symlinks, you will enjoy the new player a LOT.

Conclusion

If you still have 4.x.x and only play back MKV's with DTS audio and have an iPhone, an iPod touch or an iPad with a Retina screen, in no way upgrade. You will also want to stick with the old version if you watch iOS-native files with the player and have a Retina iPad. If, on the other hand, you have a low-resolution device or all you want is watching iOS-native files on your iPhone / iPod touch (but not the iPad!), it's worth upgrading – the MKV engine of the new series is considerably better.

Also, if your device is jailbroken and you need a really decent image viewer for images anywhere in the file system, even on an external storage card or USB memory stick mapped to the Documents folder of the player, you'll want to go for this player and certainly upgrade. It has orders of magnitude better image support.
 
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