![]() It was hiding on my other monitor, under the browser window. Either there's no function linked to it, or the change is so subtle that my brain fails to detect it. For one, I cannot fathom why the equalizer button does nothing. Function wise though it's decent, but flawed in places. Because having a player that plays any media type is not such a rare thing anymore, but being pleasing to the eye and ergonomic is something that should concern any user experience designer. You would ask why would I care so much on how the player looks. The colors are different shades and the controls are barely similar. The media library looks like it belongs from another program. While the main window can be dragged by clicking almost anywhere, the playlist can only be picked up by clicking on a thin bar which encompasses it. As a mark of inconsistency, the two other windows look and behave differently. The advanced functions can be accessed by a right click menu and if you would need anything the be accessed quicker, BS.Player has a key shortcut manager that encompasses all functions. ![]() Speaking of controls, the main buttons are small while the others are also hard to distinguish. Videos are detached from the main body and can easily overshadow the controls and force you to drag the video window around just to find the volume controls. Still, don't turn away now, other wise I would have typed it all in vain.īS.Player's interface can be best described as fragmented. ![]() ![]() Well, here I am again, facing it for the third time and I sh&% you not, BS.Player is still passable if I were to give my certified expert opinion. Mostly because I already had what I needed, and what I needed was not a fancy graphical interface that every teenager would feel cool having it decorating his virtual desktop. Having crossed paths with BS.Player a couple of times in the past, I never really felt the need to explore it. ![]()
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