The arrow-of-time dilemma states that the laws of physics are invariant for time inversion, whereas the familiar phenomena we see everyday are not (i.e., entropy increases). I show that, within a quantum mechanical framework, all phenomena which leave a trail of information behind (and hence can be studied by physics) are those where entropy necessarily increases or remains constant. All phenomena where the entropy decreases must not leave any information of their having happened. This situation is completely indistinguishable from their not having happened at all. In the light of this observation, the second law of thermodynamics is reduced to a mere tautology: physics cannot study those processes where entropy has decreased, even if they were commonplace.
It sounds to me like the simulation argument: even if that was the case, so what? In no way it affects our knowledge of the world, nor does it change anything other than providing pure intellectual stimulation."
I am not afraid to stand up for VLC for I've never found something that has worked so flawlessly crossplatform
How about MPlayer and its various Grafical User Interfaces?
The one day you'd sell your soul for something, souls are a glut.