Steve McDonald wrote:Splash Pro is working nicely for me. I have been able to flawlessly play 42.5 Mbps MOV video from a Canon SX1, as well as m2t HD video uploaded from an HDV camcorder, at 25 Mbps. It does AVC also. It plays fast-moving scenes from CMOS cameras almost perfectly, with hardly a trace of motion artifacts, even better than Splash Lite 4.3. I enabled the SPDIF/HDMI audio option and it works fine. I have an AMD quad-core and an Nvidia 8500 GT graphics card.
All I need now, is a 1280 X 720 window to display videos shot in that size, although the fullscreen playback of them looks very good. I'm hoping that the HD Cam version will be out soon, with editing features, as that is the one I would most likely buy. I think that Splash Pro is underpriced. It should sell for at least twice as much, considering its high performance and all the work that has been put into it. When the full version, with all features integrated into one program is released, it should be one of the most successful and popular video software programs. It's nice to find that something with top quality is still available at an affordable price.
You can always upgrade to a higher priced version when it becomes available.
If the price is too high there will be no interested people in buying. I believe the actual price is quite balanced.
PS: there is a lot of space for improvements on the first version of Splash PRO.