On Sun, 30 Oct 2022, Fabio Fantoni wrote:
Il 30/10/2022 20:20, Thomas Uhle ha scritto:
> [...]
>
> Hypnotix is an application to watch TV by streaming from M3U sources.
> It is primarily developed for the Cinnamon desktop in Linux Mint but could
> be used in any other desktop environment as well.
>
I don't use an IPTV, I tried shortly kodi but I am not used enough about this
type of program.
It should be seen which others are packaged in debian besides kodi (I know
only it) and if hypnotix has anything better than these to determine if it is
worth adding hypnotix in debian.
can you tell something about?
You are right, Kodi is a good program for watching IPTV. But it is also
so much more: DVB, DLNA client as well as a client for video-on-demand or
podcast services to name just a few more features. It is a full-grown
media center solution and as such installs on disk with 100MB at least
(not counting the various dependencies). Hypnotix has only one feature
compared to Kodi that is being a simple-to-use and lean application for
watching IPTV. It uses libmpv.so to seamlessly embed mpv as a player and
so only needs about 1MB of extra space on disk. That means it is quite
small compared to Kodi.
Hypnotix can consume the same M3U lists like Kodi, so you could use one of
the links provided by kodinerds.net for instance to get an up-to-date list
of TV stations. IMHO the usual suspects of media players like VLC and
alike are not suited for these types of M3U lists because these lists
contain the URLs for many TV stations in one file whereas those media
players expect that each M3U file corresponds to exactly one TV station
(and different URLs just refer to streams with different resolutions, bit
rates, subtitles, etc., but all for the same TV station). Moreover, those
media players would not automatically update the M3U lists (which is what
Hypnotix does). You would need to manually synchronize the URLs of the TV
stations.
In addition I think, sometimes it is just good to have an alternative,
especially if there is a simple, small and ready-to-go solution for
something that just works. Anyway, nobody would be asking why there are
several reincarnations of GNOME's file manager Nautilus in Debian (like
Caja, Nemo or Peony).
I don't see strong links with cinnamon from a quick look (the dependency with
xapp is minor) so it could be maintained by another team or maintainer as
well (if anyone will want maintain it)
That is right. Hypnotix is as much connected to Cinnamon as any other
appliction from the XApps family (cf. xed or xviewer for instance with the
corresponding RFP requests #830598 and #830616 respectively). Just because
it is linked to (lib)xapp, does not mean it is needed for Cinnamon.