![]() ![]() I don't know how qBittorrent exactly works, but as it is a an installed executable with its own path and even with the wrong architecture (64 vs 32bit in your case), it should not inherit any DLL and not search in the Vivaldi application path, but only take the data it gets from Vivaldi. Such a DLL does not interfere with other applications on its own, because it can not start on its own and it should not be found, not even be seen by any other application at all as long as it is not in the common search path or registered to them. The natural way to include stuff that is not always needed is to use a DLL - at least on Windows. You can either include the code in the executable (like some Chromium binaries do) or use a DLL for that (like some other Chromium binaries do, always depending on who compiled them and what was used as compiler). Vivaldi on Win and Mac uses the ffmpeg without the proprietary codecs to decode the license free stuff and for everything else it asks the OS to decode it. for Youtube) but comes with h264 and AAC licenses and codecs. Windows (at least in older versions before a certain W10 update) has no built in support for formats like WebM and OPUS (needed e.g. (Of course you you for yourself can build it for you on your own computer with codecs in) Chromium uses the ffmpeg.dll to decode the rest of it because the ffmpeg.dll it is not included in Windows.įfmpeg can be compiled with those codecs in, but that would afford paying for the those codecs if distributed in binary format, i.e. ![]() Chromium (not to be mixed up with Chrome) does not include proprietary codecs like AAC or h264/265 because they are incompatible with the used open source license. ![]()
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