
If you need the 32-bit version you'll have to Google it. The default OS X version of VLC is 64-bit.

Bizarre site design!ĮDIT: I'm curious as to whether this works on the Mac. This page has an orange download button and if you click the dropdown arrow next to it, it shows a 64-bit option. However if you Google VLC, the "VLC for Windows" page shows up: Produced by the band and Nigel Godrich, the album is widely cited as one of the greatest works of Radiohead’s-or any artist’s-catalogue and was the first Radiohead record to reach 1 in the UK and to be be nominated for the Album of the Year Grammy. Radiohead - OK Computer iTunes Plus AAC M4A 1997. OK Computer was originally released on various dates ranging from May to July 1997. The VLC website is quite strange - the home page has a blue download button and the 64-bit version is nowhere to be found, even on the "other versions" page. Vampire Weekend - Itunes Single collectioniTunes Plus AAC M4A(2008-2013). Once I installed the 64-bit version of VLC, I could drag m4a files into Reaper without renaming. What I realised was that I was running the 64-bit version of Reaper, and the 32-bit version of VLC.

In Reaper's preferences > Media > Video/REX/Misc, the video decoder priority starts with VLC. I know this is an old thread, but it's the first one that shows up when you search "m4a in Reaper." I was puzzled as to why I could drag m4a's into Reaper (without renaming) on my old laptop and not on my new one (both running Windows).
