everybody wanna tell you the meaning of music

Download:
http://speeddemosarchive.com/smplayer/smplayer-20090712.zip (8.17 MB uncompressed)
If you run Linux, OS X, or similar, you can get packages from the SMPlayer site or your distribution's repository, or compile from source.
Purpose:
This is an extremely fast and lightweight media player for Windows that plays basically everything and supports -- but in no way requires -- extensive customizations. It is designed to work out of the box with no setup or configuration. Depending on your taste, the interface can be highly minimalist or something fancier as above. Please note: I didn't do that much work at all, so thank the people behind FFmpeg, MPlayer, and SMPlayer.
Usage:
There is no installation and this does not use the registry or steal all your file extensions or require codec packs or whatever. Just unzip the 3 files and click on smplayer -- you can create a shortcut if you like. To play a file, just drag and drop into the window or use the open menu. SMPlayer recognizes segmented files, so you can just open segment 1 and the entire run will be loaded for you. By default, available audio commentary will also be automatically selected.
Basic commands:
Arrow keys navigate: up/down for previous/next file, left/right to seek in the current file. Double click on the window or alt-enter to go in and out of fullscreen -- in fullscreen, there is a nice popup menu at the bottom. To toggle double size on and off, middle click on the main window or hit ctrl-enter. You can set the demuxer/codecs used for the current file in the file info <enter>. You can select audio or subtitle tracks with the corresponding menu, and you can go to audio/load to load an external file, like audio commentary.
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Additional customization:
You will probably never need to do anything else, but it could be useful for you to mess around with the settings once to see what you like. I picked settings for maximum compatibility, but you can customize things to your own machine or preferences. Most of the stuff is self-explanatory but there are some key points.
- If you want to associate SMPlayer with all sorts of different files, go to "file types" in preferences.
- SMPlayer has support for most formats built in, but if you ever find something you can't play, download this. Unzip these files into your SMPlayer folder.
- If you want even more speed, the biggest "free" things you can set performance-wise are directx (fast), direct3d, or gl (fast) instead of gl2 for the video driver, and number of threads (2 for dual core, 4 for quad, etc) in performance. It may cost you slightly in video quality, but you can turn off postprocessing in general/video for a small boost and always skip the loop filter in performance for a large boost.
- To get higher quality subtitles, select "Use SSA/ASS library" in the subtitles menu. This will make the very next file you load take a long time as it generates a fontconfig folder.
- If you want SMPlayer to reuse the existing window instead of opening up another window when you load a new file, you can set that in options/interface/instances.
- If you want to keep SMPlayer in your tray persistently, hit f4 (or options menu) and now when you close, it will stay there. f3 (or video menu) toggles "always on top." And f5/f6 toggle the toolbars. You can move the playlist around or undock it completely by dragging.
- To take advantage of SMPlayer's file-specific "memory" features, check the box in media settings in general. Go to interface and see if you want to check "remember position and size" and bump up the max files history. Finally, you can open the playlist preferences and have it remember your previous playlists or read all metadata automatically.
- This won't be a problem for SDA videos of course, but if you have a wack vid, it's easy to fix it. For upside-down or rotated vids, go to the video menu. If only the left or right channel has audio, use audio/stereo mode. And if the stereo channels are reversed, audio/filters/reverse stereo.
- If you would prefer the volume to stay roughly consistent from file to file, go to general/audio and check "volume normalization by default."
- You can go to keyboard and mouse to change what the mouse buttons and wheel do. You can change the keyboard shortcuts around to your liking here (perhaps add numpad or special media keyboard usage), or you can load this file for the much simpler SMPlayer defaults. You can revert back to my build defaults with this file. Once this is done, you can go to interface/seeking and set how far a short/medium/long seek or mouse wheel jump goes.
- If you know what you are doing with command line mplayer, you can go to advanced in the preferences and pass in parameters that way.
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