Well, I'm not having luck getting my iBook 600MHz playing DVDs in a decent way.
In fact, I've spent a great amount of time trying to understand what the problems are, playing with many different programs and getting unsatisfactory results. I have woody installed in this iBook and, with xine (0.9.8), I get a reasonable playback, with around 15% of dropped frames and with ugly interlaced frames. Enabling the onefield_xv deinterlace method works and makes the DVD more or less watchable, though during some stages, I can see artifacts on the image due to excessive frames being dropped. I can't get vlc 0.3.0 working well here, because there are issues with the sound (probably due to endianness problems, although I'm not really sure). I already tried telling vlc all different possibilities for endianness or signedness of the output, but I don't know if the menu is functional, as I saw little changes when I played with that option. Enabling the diagnostics seems to suggest that not all frames are played. I also tried getting mplayer to work with the iBook. It works moderately well, but had endianess problems with the audio (and in other parts of the program too -- I even sent them one patch to correct the generation of WAV files). Mplayer can now play vob files with decent sound, and the video is smooth (if I compile with gcc 3.0), but it seems that the iBook can't keep up with the decoding of video frames and the audio and the video become desynchronized. :-( If I playback with an option to drop frames, then it is watchable, but the interlaced frames become noticeable. I can use the option "-npp lb" to deinterlace and it works, but it is not usable, as too many frames get dropped (even though I'd guess that more frames would be dropped). The output of mplayer shows the amount of time it spends decoding the frames, showing the frames and dealing with audio. I notice that the percentage of time it spends with video output is quite high in comparison to my Celeron 466MHz (I'll make further tests). I tried installing Michel's XFree 4.2.0 binaries and they seem to make xine work better, dropping around 6 frames less than with woody's X 4.1.0.1. On the other hand, DRI (which, I heard, is supposed to enable DMA transfers to video) wasn't enabled with XFree 4.2.0 because it complained that my r128 module is version 2.1.6, but that version 2.2 would be needed. The catch is that current benh's kernel (just rsync'ed) still has r128.c with version 2.1.6. Is there any way for me to get DMA working with this machine? I have already tried many things that I could think of, but I am starting to think that the possibilities are almost exhausted. :-( So, is there anybody here that is able to see DVDs with their iBook? Thanks for ANY help or comment, Roger... P.S.: BTW an mplayer compiled with X 4.1 headers uses 40% of its time in video output. The same binary, with X 4.2, uses around 140% and is quite (visually) slower than with before. Does this increase in time come from the headers with which the program was compiled? -- =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= Rogério Brito - [EMAIL PROTECTED] - http://www.ime.usp.br/~rbrito/ =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-= -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]