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Android mkv player
Android mkv player











  1. Android mkv player movie#
  2. Android mkv player software#

The least 'friction' for playback on your phone would be if you use h.264 and mp3 (since both have hardware support you can stick with high resolutions and higher bit rates). Regarding the use of a program like Avidemux, you'll have a lot of options as far as converting a video file.

Android mkv player software#

One a side note, one advantage MX Player has over VLC is buried in its Settings there are a lot of different options you can tweak different combinations of hardware (when it exists) and software decoding. With h.265, it will be a matter where hardware decoding is not involved so all the processing is being done through software. Overall it's the least demanding on your phone's system resources (CPU, GPU, audio chip and the OS and app software).

Android mkv player movie#

Most computing devices (computers and smartphones) have included h.264 (video) and mp3 (audio) decoding support at a hardware level for years now, so viewing a movie that's h.264/mp3 relies a lot on the integral hardware to do most of the 'heavy lifting' and the software filling in on the rest. If it was instead h.264 than a lot of the system processing would be handed off to hardware decoding. Just to add, as far as that mkv file your A5 was probably using software decoding for the video stream. If you're also looking for good program to use, take a look at Avidemux, it's free, well supported, and available for Linux, Mac, and Windows: I'd recommend using a computer or laptop instead, if available. If you're looking for a good media file converter, there's probably something in the Play Store but something like a 6GB video file is going to take time and lots of system resources to process.

android mkv player android mkv player

Suggest you convert your video file down to a lessor resolution - either stay with h.265 (HEVC) at 1024 or less, or stick with higher resolutions and instead encode with h.264 (AVC) which requires a lot less horsepower than h.265 to view. My much older S3 (2012) can play h.265 videos, but they need to be at 720x400 or less resolution to play properly. It's probably not an issue with h.265, it's just that an h.265 encoded video stream at 1920x1040 resolution is simply too much for your phone. It's simply overloading your A5's system resources, causing those stuttering issues. The AAC audio shouldn't be a problem but I'm going to bet your problem it directly tied to the video stream.













Android mkv player