On Fri, 2004-05-14 at 09:49, Ole-Egil Hvitmyren wrote: > Cedric Pradalier wrote: > > According to Albert Cahalan, on 13 May 2004 11:31:39 -0400, > > > >>On Thu, 2004-05-13 at 11:30, Rob Latham wrote: > >> > >>>On Wed, May 12, 2004 at 06:22:39PM -0400, Albert Cahalan wrote: > >> > >>>>forget about streaming video and flash > >>> > >>>mplayer and mplayer-plugin make streaming video a little less painful, > >>>but yeah, it's about 6 months before support for the latest codecs > >>>shows up (pretty fast turnaround, if you ask me :> ) > >> > >>So you can just point your web browser at a popular > >>news site and watch the video clips? > >> > >>http://www.cnn.com/ > >>http://www.msnbc.com/ > >>http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/default.stm > >> > >>Skip-free full-screen video from an encrypted DVD too? > >> > >>I'd especially love a solution that was solid enough > >>that I didn't have to worry about software upgrades > >>breaking it. > >> > > > > > > Also, the realplayer 8 is distributed for most ppc linux architecture. > > It does not work as a plugin, but if you look at the web page source in > > firefox, you can fetch the media address and feed it to the player. > > > > > > And since mplayer can use the realplayer 8 libraries I wouldn't be > surprised if mplayer-plugin could indeed be used as realplayer plugin ;-) > > I didn't try CNN, because then I need to "sign up here for a 14 day free > trial", MSNBC told me that "MSN Video requires Microsoft Windows® 98, > Windows ME, Windows 2000, or Windows XP." (very likely it doesn't, but > they're refusing to show their video content to anyone not using a > MickeySoft solution. [ ..... ]
aptitude install privoxy Nice tool .... I think it's predecessor was the Junkbuster proxy ... One can change the User Agent variable for a browser via privoxy being connected to a browser. So with privoxy installed what one can do is this: Writing something like this to /etc/privoxy/user.action ------------------------ { \ +hide-user-agent{Mozilla/4.77 [en] (Macintosh; N; PPC; ja) Gecko/250901 LousyBrowserSystems/1.0 (DinoOrg, Inc.)} \ } .junkbusters.com/cgi-bin. -------------------------- after this: /etc/init.d/privoxy restart and then going to <http://www.junkbusters.com/cgi-bin/privacy> which is a browser-check page, the new User Agent should be shown on that page. If not checking something like /var/log/privoxy/errorfile /var/log/privoxy/logfile might help. With the settings above only sites along the URL www.junkbusters.com/cgi-bin/ will see the changed User Agent: All other sites outside this URL should see the real, unchanged User Agent info. And now if you change in ------------------------ { \ +hide-user-agent{Foobrowser/4.77 [en] (OtherOS; N; PPC; ja) Gecko/250901 LousyBrowserSystems/1.0 (DinoOrg, Inc.)} \ } .junkbusters.com/cgi-bin. -------------------------- the line .junkbusters.com/cgi-bin. to a simple slash, being the only character on the line, like this: / all sites will think the browser is like LousyBrowserSystems/1.0 (DinoOrg, Inc) And the whole thing is wonderfully documented. And just in case some Linux high priests perhaps suspect now that I might recommend all this from above for doing at home, thus driving the overall Linux ratings via some faked browser settings to zero: No, Ladies and Gentlemen: I never ever would do this, and I swear I have never ever faked my user-agent, and No: I never do it and I also shall never do it. Ever. Promise. All the above was just a theoretical discussion, never meant to be implemented for reality. So "Don't do this at home, kids", as Ray Cokes once, in other circumstances, IIRC, put it ... HTH Best Regards Wolfgang -- Profile, links: http://profiles.yahoo.com/wolfgangpfeiffer