Michel, I wish you would go over to this thread & answer my questions.
https://groups.google.com/g/video-downloadhelper-q-and-a/c/S9BPzSdwtPw
And speaking of that thread, I found something on which VDH recognized nothing & I had to
use the technique described over there. I suppose before I continue, I should follow my
own advice & say this:
Windows 7 64-bit, Firefox 114.0.2 64-bit, licensed VDH 7.7.0a1 beta, CoApp 1.6.3
The video that VDH fails to recognize is this:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OrjotlL-r0I
For anybody else posting here, that's how you're supposed to post here. Provide a proper
problem report. Don't just say, "It didn't work for me." Tell us your environment &
give examples. You are not helping in the slightest by just saying it's not working.
That isn't true anyway. I've used it on several things & it works just fine. But Michel
has said it's still a work in progress & you will be helping if you post a proper problem
report. Look at what I just posted. That's a proper problem report. Do your posts just
like that.
I'm astonished at this failure of VDH because this video is available in only 2
resolutions, & those are the 2 lowest resolutions you commonly find elsewhere on YouTube.
Multiple reloads of the page & launching playback on the page still left the VDH menu
completely empty.
I could not use my player json technique from the other thread because I had reloaded the
YouTube page several times trying to get VDH to recognize the video. So I fell back to
my log_event technique. That yielded both a video mp4 & an audio mp4. That was after I
used the \\u0026 trick I describe in that other thread.
For the video track (obtained using the technique in the other thread), VDH actually
recognized something. So I launched the download in VDH. But it was getting really
putrid download speed, worse than normal for YouTube. I didn't time it but I think the
download lasted much longer than half the 8:19 of this clip. While that VDH download was
still in progress, I popped up the context menu on the video & executed Save Video As...
Firefox downloaded the video in about 20 seconds. The VDH download continued for a
couple of minutes after the Firefox download completed. Michel, you need to look into
this. Firefox is eating your lunch. You are doing something that causes YouTube to
throttle VDH downloads. Firefox does something different & it is not subject to the same
throttling. I think Firefox downloads are still throttled but they are not throttled as
heavily as VDH downloads are. You need to look into this.
For the audio track, VDH recognized nothing. The VDH menu remained empty even after I
launched playback of the audio track. But Save Audio As... in Firefox ran in maybe 3
seconds, tops.
Playing the separate video & audio tracks synchronously in VLC worked flawlessly. The
whole video played, with audio, without a hitch, albeit at the painfully low resolution
that was the best on offer for this one.