
For apps that are now Universal, you need to indicate under requirements that they are universal, because there are users that may want to run native-ARM apps, if available (and if you own an ARM mac, why wouldn't you want to run native apps if available?).Changed: Added a LEGACY_ENCODE switch to the header to allow encoding in the older style for uses like FFMpeg that haven't updated their decoders.Ĭhanged: Made the help shortcut in the start menu link to the webpage instead of the old help file.Ĭhanged: Removed the old help files during install.Ĭhanged: 8-bit encoding is a little faster (it was using the 64-bit branch but didn't need to).Ĭhanged: Switched to help on the webpage instead of HTML help (it was outdated). Maybe that means separate MU pages for each platform in the case of VLC, or you need to host both versions and offer the user a choice which file when downloading. So come up with a system to handle this new world we live in, every day that goes by it only will get more confusing. VLC is the first app I've seen that comes as separate installers, but logical to think more will come, for whatever reason a Universal app is not available (technical reasons, licensing, size of the executable, who knows). There a many Universal apps now, but if you look at the MAc Update page for them, there is no indication that they are Universal and requirements still say Intel-64. As I"ve been telling MU for several months you need to come up with a system/policy for how to document and catalog Universal and/or ARM only apps. The download you are hosting currently as of this date is the ARM version.

VLC is now available in separate Intel and ARM (Apple Silicon) versions, with DIFFERENT versioning schemes.
