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#Daum potplayer review how to#
So there is more to be desired in terms of stereoscopic 3D support from the Portplayer, though with the use of pixel shaders (if you know how to write the needed code) it is possible to extend the functionality of the player. LINER - Search Faster & Highlight Web/Youtube. Another thing that is missing and might be useful in terms of stereoscopic 3D support is a software pageflipping mode that could be useful for people with 3D DLP projectors. This and the 2D subtitles support for 3D videos is intended to be used for 3D video playback on 3D HDTVs and the only thing in that aspect that is kind of missing here is the support for Row Interleaved output for passive 3D HDTVs.
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What is more interesting in the Potplayer is the ability to use a predefined set of pixels shaders to convert 3D videos from Side by Side or Top & Bottom to anaglyph 3D format (Green-Magenta or Red-Cyan) and to watch a 3D version of 3D videos. For more flexibility you will need to go for something like the ffdshow subtitles filter for the playback of 2D subtitles over 3D video files. Of course you get the 2D subtitles properly displayed on top of 3D video, but the subtitles are put at screen depth level and you cannot adjust their position in 3D space. The options is available in the right-click quick menu as well as in the player options. The Potplayer has built-in support for displaying 2D subtitles properly when playing back stereoscopic 3D videos with it, however this only works for 3D videos in Side by Side or Top & Bottom format. And much like the other two Korean players mentioned above, Daum Potplayer also has some stereoscopic 3D support built-in and that is what interests me the most… Potplayer is yet another free software video player coming from Korea, much like the GOM Player or the KMPlayer, in fact Potplayer is very similar to KMPlayer in many aspects including the fact that the player comes with built-in codecs to support all of the most common video and audio codecs out of the box.