


When you're actually watching a video, you can access IINA's absurdly accommodating options for video, audio, and subtitles through its pop-out Quick Settings Panel. You can even specify how you want subtitles to look, right down to colors, fonts, and drop shadows. (One of mine showed up as an option even on different movies several folders away.) You can tell IINA to prioritize subtitle files with certain filenames or to look first in a particular folder if you've got a single spot where you stash your subtitle tracks. Find a subtitle track you really like? You can save it to your computer from IINA's Subtitle menu in the menubar.Īnd if you do have local subtitle tracks on hand, IINA will doggedly find them and offer them to you. But you can choose the more multilingual in IINA's preferences, and specify any of a host of languages as your preferred subtitle option in the same pane. Note that since IINA originates in China, by default many of these subtitles will be, well, Chinese. It can search the web for third-party subtitles to any file, manually or automatically, and begin playing them in seconds.
#MEDIA PLAYER FOR MAC REVIEW MOVIE#
Speaking of subtitles, if you're playing a movie file, need a subtitle track, but for some reason don't have one, IINA has you covered. Note, however, that IINA can't work similar magic on sites like Netflix or Hulu. IINA blessedly skipped the ads that showed up before YouTube's videos on the web, and it included subtitles when the online video did.
#MEDIA PLAYER FOR MAC REVIEW FULL#
Selections from YouTube and Vimeo loaded with just a few seconds' buffering and looked stellar at normal resolution or in full screen. That held true whether I ran IINA on a souped-up recent iMac or an aging MacBook.Ī "watch in IINA" browser extension - installed by default for Safari, available for Chrome and Firefox as an easily snagged add-on - proved equally adept with online videos. Videos played almost instantly, and I could scroll through them quickly and responsively, even when I was loading a remote file from a server elsewhere on my home network. In my tests, IINA handled every file type I threw at it, from. It's probably not fair to make that comparison, but IINA can do so many other things so well that I found myself hoping it could do that, too.īut while you may not be able to trim or split clips, IINA's creators have clearly taken pains to think of just about everything else you might want to do while watching movies, short of a window that lets you make popcorn or order a pizza.

Also, IINA can't edit video, and QuickTime Player can. 48MB - probably won't matter much in practice. In terms of file size, IINA's nearly twice as hefty as VLC, though the difference - roughly 88MB vs. Let's get the app's few shortcomings - if you can even call them such - out of the way first.
