The quote you use, "not yet is that spirit of pristine valour extinct in
you" can you please tell me where you found this.
> andrew.mcglas...@affinityvision.com.au
<mailto:andrew.mcglas...@affinityvision.com.au>> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > On 23/03/2016 12:18 AM, Michael Fothergill wrote:
> > > I own a Samsung BD-C5900 Blu ray/DVD player.
> >
There's a reas
> andrew.mcglas...@affinityvision.com.au
<mailto:andrew.mcglas...@affinityvision.com.au>> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > On 23/03/2016 12:18 AM, Michael Fothergill wrote:
> > > I own a Samsung BD-C5900 Blu ray/DVD player.
> >
There's a reas
> On 23/03/2016 12:18 AM, Michael Fothergill wrote:
> > > > I own a Samsung BD-C5900 Blu ray/DVD player.
> > >
> > > I think you will find that the USB port on a DVD player is only for
> > > playing content and/or updating the firmware of the player itself.
>
On Tue, Mar 22, 2016 at 05:13:43PM +, Michael Fothergill wrote:
> On 22 March 2016 at 16:24, Andrew McGlashan <
> andrew.mcglas...@affinityvision.com.au> wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > On 23/03/2016 12:18 AM, Michael Fothergill wrote:
> > > I own a Sams
On 22 March 2016 at 16:24, Andrew McGlashan <
andrew.mcglas...@affinityvision.com.au> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On 23/03/2016 12:18 AM, Michael Fothergill wrote:
> > I own a Samsung BD-C5900 Blu ray/DVD player.
>
> I think you will find that the USB port on a DVD player is onl
Hi,
On 23/03/2016 12:18 AM, Michael Fothergill wrote:
> I own a Samsung BD-C5900 Blu ray/DVD player.
I think you will find that the USB port on a DVD player is only for
playing content and/or updating the firmware of the player itself.
There would be very little chance that it will act as a
On 2016-03-22, Michael Fothergill wrote:
> --001a11c3193add3a72052ea30a72
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8
>
> Dear Folks,
>
> I own a Samsung BD-C5900 Blu ray/DVD player.
>
> It's meant to be used for viewing movies etc recorded on blu ray discs etc.
Hi,
Michael Fothergill wrote:
> Out of interest, would it possible to insert e.g. a debian minimal install
> DVD into it, connect to my PC via e.g. a usb cable and use it to boot up and
> install debian on it?
It seems that the option to attach USB devices is rather for
the player acting as compu
Dear Folks,
I own a Samsung BD-C5900 Blu ray/DVD player.
It's meant to be used for viewing movies etc recorded on blu ray discs etc.
Out of interest, would it possible to insert e.g. a debian minimal install
DVD into it, connect to my PC via e.g. a usb cable and use it to boot up
and in
corder, as long as I can copy
the video to my PC, do some minimum transcoding if necessary but definitely
not full-fledged fancy transcoding that takes hours to finish, then put the
result avi file onto dvd disk, so as to play it on my avi-compatible dvd
player.
Is it ever possible? and for low-budget
On Thu, Dec 29, 2005 at 08:58:17PM +0100, Kjetil Kjernsmo wrote:
On Thursday 29 December 2005 17:45, Ron Johnson wrote:
kino (which is a non-linear video editor) *might* be able to do
it, as onw of it's side functions.
Tangential on this topic, I encoded a movie from and AVI created by my
dig
.
mplayer and transcode (which comes in the mplayer package,
I think)
can do the conversion. Don't remember, though, what
package will do the rest.
kino (which is a non-linear video editor) *might* be able
to do it, as onw of it's side functions.
The manual for my dedicated DVD playe
Tiago Pedrosa wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Thu, 29 Dec 2005 10:30:18 +0100
Marc Shapiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Chinook wrote:
Marc Shapiro wrote:
Robert Glueck wrote:
I'd like to play video clips in .avi, .wmv and .mov format
on a standalone
) *might* be able
> > to do it, as onw of it's side functions.
> >
>
> The manual for my dedicated DVD player does not state that
> it supports the MPEG-2 format.
>
> What is the native format of commercial movie DVD's that
> play on all standalone
Ron Johnson wrote:
> On Wed, 2005-12-28 at 22:01 -0500, Robert Glueck wrote:
>> I'd like to play video clips in .avi, .wmv and .mov
>> format on a standalone DVD player that's hooked up to a
>> standard
>> TV set. The particular unit is a Magnavox MDV456
On Thursday 29 December 2005 17:45, Ron Johnson wrote:
> kino (which is a non-linear video editor) *might* be able to do
> it, as onw of it's side functions.
Tangential on this topic, I encoded a movie from and AVI created by my
digital camera on my Sarge box to MPEG2 to using Kino. It plays fine
wrote:
> > I'd like to play video clips in .avi, .wmv and .mov format
> > on a standalone DVD player that's hooked up to a standard
> > TV set. The particular unit is a Magnavox MDV456/17. It's
> > able to play commercial movie DVD's, audio CD's, final
On Wed, 2005-12-28 at 22:01 -0500, Robert Glueck wrote:
> I'd like to play video clips in .avi, .wmv and .mov format
> on a standalone DVD player that's hooked up to a standard
> TV set. The particular unit is a Magnavox MDV456/17. It's
> able to play commerc
On Thursday, 29 December 2005 at 1:26:59 -0800, Marc Shapiro wrote:
> Chinook wrote:
> >Marc Shapiro wrote:
> >
> >>Robert Glueck wrote:
> >>
> >>>I'd like to play video clips in .avi, .wmv and .mov format
> >>>on a st
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Thu, 29 Dec 2005 10:30:18 +0100
Marc Shapiro <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Chinook wrote:
> > Marc Shapiro wrote:
> >
> >> Robert Glueck wrote:
> >>
> >>> I'd like to play video clips in .av
Chinook wrote:
Marc Shapiro wrote:
Robert Glueck wrote:
I'd like to play video clips in .avi, .wmv and .mov format
on a standalone DVD player that's hooked up to a standard
TV set.
I'd like to play them on Sarge. Just today I clicked on a .mov file
and was asked if I wa
Marc Shapiro wrote:
Robert Glueck wrote:
I'd like to play video clips in .avi, .wmv and .mov format
on a standalone DVD player that's hooked up to a standard
TV set.
I'd like to play them on Sarge. Just today I clicked on a .mov file and
was asked if I wanted to use the
Robert Glueck wrote:
I'd like to play video clips in .avi, .wmv and .mov format
on a standalone DVD player that's hooked up to a standard
TV set.
I'd like to play them on Sarge. Just today I clicked on a .mov file and
was asked if I wanted to use the default program (gmp
I'd like to play video clips in .avi, .wmv and .mov format
on a standalone DVD player that's hooked up to a standard
TV set. The particular unit is a Magnavox MDV456/17. It's
able to play commercial movie DVD's, audio CD's, finalized
DVD+R's and DVD+RW's, an
Thanks Icebiker. Good suggestion. I'll give it a try.
--
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1500x1000 pixels.
I have to say, I've only tried it once.
/icebiker
- Original Message -
From: "Tong" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, October 28, 2004 14:31
Subject: Re: OT, dvd player playable jpeg pictures
On Thu, 28 Oct 2004 08:51
On Thu, 28 Oct 2004 08:51:21 -0400, Icebiker wrote:
> I was able to play jpegs on my dvd player (a Koss cheapie), using a data CD
> created on Windows.
Yeah, data cd, that's what I was talking about.
> Not all dvd players support playing dvds, you want to read the box real
&g
I was able to play jpegs on my dvd player (a Koss cheapie), using a data CD
created on Windows.
Not all dvd players support playing dvds, you want to read the box real
closely before you buy. There are also standards for formatting the dvd that
gives you some control over how the pictures are
On Wed, 27 Oct 2004 11:00:52 +0200, Martin Dickopp wrote:
>> Anybody know what kind of jpeg pictures are playable in normal dvd player?
>>
>> I burned some, but it seems that DVD players are very picky about the
>> pictures they can show.
>>
>> My DVD player
Tong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hi,
>
> Anybody know what kind of jpeg pictures are playable in normal dvd player?
>
> I burned some, but it seems that DVD players are very picky about the
> pictures they can show.
>
> My DVD player manual can't help m
Hi,
Anybody know what kind of jpeg pictures are playable in normal dvd player?
I burned some, but it seems that DVD players are very picky about the
pictures they can show.
My DVD player manual can't help me with this. I've looked everywhere, but
didn't find any relev
Hi!
Dvdnav should depend on dvdread, which in its turn recommends you to
install css functionality.
There's a script included for this:
/usr/share/doc/libdvdread2/examples/install-css.sh
Another possibility is to add some package rep. which includes this
support. Look at www.apt-get.org.
The Vi
I have an USB HP DVD+RW which is working well so far. I
have yet to be able to view any commercial DVDs with it
yet. Tried xine from 3.0r0 with dvdnav, which I believed
includes css abilities. I get the following errors:
libdvdcss error: css error: ioctl_ReadCopyright failed,
make sure DVD ioct
>
>Throw in MPlayer (MEncoder's more popular brother) to preview
>your creation. Also available at that site is avidemux, which has
>a gui that will let you do simple edits. Once you have converted
>the DivX to MPEG-1 (or 2, if you want an SVCD), you go much of
>the same route: vcdimager to create
7;ve got a divx file (not a copyrighted one, it's from
> > > http://www.crewoftwo.com/movie/index.html and they made it
> > > themselves) that i'd like to play on a dvd player.
> > >
> > > my flatmate burns them under windows all the time but i
> >
ww.crewoftwo.com/movie/index.html and they made it themselves) that
>> i'd like to play on a dvd player.
>>
>> my flatmate burns them under windows all the time but i don't ahve a
>> windows cd bruner and figure it shouldn't me too hard.
>>
>> does
John Griffiths wrote:
hullo all.
I've got a divx file (not a copyrighted one, it's from
http://www.crewoftwo.com/movie/index.html and they made it themselves) that
i'd like to play on a dvd player.
my flatmate burns them under windows all the time but i don't ahve a
windows
hullo all.
I've got a divx file (not a copyrighted one, it's from
http://www.crewoftwo.com/movie/index.html and they made it themselves) that
i'd like to play on a dvd player.
my flatmate burns them under windows all the time but i don't ahve a
windows cd bruner and figure
Rob Weir wrote:
On Mon, Dec 09, 2002 at 10:31:51AM -0500, David Ellis wrote:
Has anyone had any luck with DVD Playback on Debian with KDE 3?
Can you point out a good player (and maybe a website) with a download and
HOWTO?
I believe mplayer (www.mplayerhq.hu) can handle this, even DVDs with th
On Mon, Dec 09, 2002 at 10:31:51AM -0500, David Ellis wrote:
> Has anyone had any luck with DVD Playback on Debian with KDE 3?
>
> Can you point out a good player (and maybe a website) with a download and
> HOWTO?
I believe mplayer (www.mplayerhq.hu) can handle this, even DVDs with the
moronic CS
On Mon, 9 Dec 2002 10:31:51 -0500 (EST)
"David Ellis" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Has anyone had any luck with DVD Playback on Debian with KDE 3?
>
> Can you point out a good player (and maybe a website) with a download and
> HOWTO?
> - David
I like MPlayer... there is a "debian way" to build i
On Monday 09 December 2002 08:31 am, David Ellis wrote:
> Has anyone had any luck with DVD Playback on Debian with KDE 3?
>
> Can you point out a good player (and maybe a website) with a download and
> HOWTO?
I just ran across this link today, although it looks like good
software. Give it a try.
Has anyone had any luck with DVD Playback on Debian with KDE 3?
Can you point out a good player (and maybe a website) with a download and
HOWTO?
- David
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On Friday 04 January 2002 4:24 pm, Kent West wrote:
> Richard Otte wrote:
> > I recently acquired a DVD player from another Linux machine, and am
> > considering installing it in my Linux machine. I have an IDE CD-RW in
> >
Richard Otte wrote:
I recently acquired a DVD player from another Linux machine, and am
considering installing it in my Linux machine. I have an IDE CD-RW in
the machine, and can hook the Dvd up to the end of the ribbon connected
to the CDRW. But I wonder what sort of software modifications
I recently acquired a DVD player from another Linux machine, and am
considering installing it in my Linux machine. I have an IDE CD-RW in
the machine, and can hook the Dvd up to the end of the ribbon connected
to the CDRW. But I wonder what sort of software modifications I would
have to make
Thomas Halahan wrote:
I don't understand why I can't get my K6-2 400MHz, and Rage
IIC greaphics card to give good playback. In the DVD howto
I see that you need io ctrl in the Kernel. Could it be
that I do't have this feature enabled? Is it really that
critical.
I guess I want to know w
On Thu, 20 Dec 2001, Thomas Halahan wrote:
>
> I don't understand why I can't get my K6-2 400MHz, and Rage
> IIC greaphics card to give good playback. In the DVD howto
> I see that you need io ctrl in the Kernel. Could it be
> that I do't have this feature enabled? Is it really that
> critica
I don't understand why I can't get my K6-2 400MHz, and Rage
IIC greaphics card to give good playback. In the DVD howto
I see that you need io ctrl in the Kernel. Could it be
that I do't have this feature enabled? Is it really that
critical.
I guess I want to know what is the likely weake
How can I determine how much video RAM my card has, I tend to buy used
parts, which usually means I have to find that stuff out for myself.
If I remember right, I used to use a program called SuperProbe to find
it, but I can't seem to locate that.
For what it's worth, it's a Matrox G450 dual head
Romuald DELAVERGNE <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > "Christian Schoenebeck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > Really? What's the name? I haven't found one named trancsode or
> > similar.
>
> You install this package with dpkg (It come from marillat packages)
> So 'apt-cache search transcode' can't
Peter Good wrote:
>
> On Tue, 4 Dec 2001 17:15, Jeffrey W. Baker wrote:
>
> > Video RAM is nearly irrelevant. Anything with 2MB can do
> > 1024x768/16-bit which is what you want for DVD.
>
> This might be a silly question, but why then, do they sell video cards > now,
> with at least 8mb stan
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> You should consider adding
>
> deb http://marillat.free.fr/ unstable main
> ...
> Walter
I don't sugest packages from that source, at least mplayer package is
out-of-law (other DVD stuff probably too) and primary reason is that wrong
compiled, it is
Le 2001.12.05 16:06, Joachim Trinkwitz a écrit :
> "Christian Schoenebeck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > > For transcode exists even a Debian package in unstable.
> > >
> > Really? What's the name? I haven't found one named trancsode or
> similar.
>
"Christian Schoenebeck" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > For transcode exists even a Debian package in unstable.
> >
> Really? What's the name? I haven't found one named trancsode or similar.
Maybe because of your spelling? ;)
$ apt-cac
Christian Schoenebeck schrieb am Monday, den 03. December 2001:
> Hi!
>
> Are there packages for viewing video DVDs? I haven't
> found some.
You should consider adding
deb http://marillat.free.fr/ unstable main
to your /etc/apt/sources.list file. This server has plenty of DVD
players and oth
> For transcode exists even a Debian package in unstable.>
Really? What's the name? I
haven't found one named trancsode or similar.
Christian
Schoenebeck
Thus spake Joachim Trinkwitz on Tue, Dec 04, 2001 at 10:48:21AM +0100:
> Thomas Hallaran <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>
> > Transcode is pretty much the only option for linux dvd -> other format
> > conversion (ripping). I haven't used it however.
> > http://www.theorie.physik.uni-goettingen.de/~os
Thomas Hallaran <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Transcode is pretty much the only option for linux dvd -> other format
> conversion (ripping). I haven't used it however.
> http://www.theorie.physik.uni-goettingen.de/~ostreich/transcode/
For transcode exists even a Debian package in unstable.
Greet
On Tue, 2001-12-04 at 09:54, Peter Good wrote:
> On Tue, 4 Dec 2001 17:15, Jeffrey W. Baker wrote:
> This might be a silly question, but why then, do they sell video cards now,
> with at least 8mb standard, with 32mb in a lot, and in my case 64mb?
Mostly to store more textures for 3D rendering.
On Tue, 4 Dec 2001, Peter Good wrote:
> On Tue, 4 Dec 2001 17:15, Jeffrey W. Baker wrote:
>
> > Video RAM is nearly irrelevant. Anything with 2MB can do
> > 1024x768/16-bit which is what you want for DVD. For film-source DVDs
> > you want 72Hz or 96Hz refresh so you need a RAMDAC of 82MHz or 11
On Tue, 4 Dec 2001 17:15, Jeffrey W. Baker wrote:
> Video RAM is nearly irrelevant. Anything with 2MB can do
> 1024x768/16-bit which is what you want for DVD. For film-source DVDs
> you want 72Hz or 96Hz refresh so you need a RAMDAC of 82MHz or 110MHz
> respectively. The other consideration for
On Mon, 2001-12-03 at 19:17, Alec wrote:
> On Monday 03 December 2001 03:32 pm, Timo Boewing wrote:
> > Jeffrey W. Baker wrote:
> > > Ogle also has issues.
> >
> > mh, so far i discovered none, but also watched only two movies with
> > it (T2, Episode1). From my point of view, ogle seemed to have
On Mon, Dec 03, 2001 at 09:03:26PM +0100, Christian Schoenebeck wrote:
>
> Can you also give me some hint which programs I can use for ripping DVDs
> or can you point me some docs on the web to get more information about
> that?
mplayer (http://www.mplayerhq.hu) plays DVDs (needs libdvdread, and
Alec wrote:
How much RAM on the video card? I'm wondering what kind of hardware one needs
to play DVDs and MPEG-4s under Linux.
Alec
The Laptop: PIII 850MHz w/ 256MB SDRAM 133, GeForce2Go w/ 16MB DDR,
Desktop:Athlon A 500MHz w/ 384MB SDRAM 133, GeForce 1 w/ 32MB DDR
works mostly liq
I have a K6-2 550Mhz CPU + 256Mb of RAM. The Video card is on-board with only
2Mb of RAM (not upgradable) I'm wondering if I should get a DVD drive or it
will be a waste of money. Any way to find out?
Can I download DVD-quality MPEG2 files somewhere so I can test my system
power with `plaympe
Back before I upgraded, with an early version of Xine, early version of
Captian Css's d4d, a celeron 433, riva tnt2 32mb agp, and 128mb ram, i used
to get quite respectable performance watching dvds. I was running Nvidia's X4
drivers though, and also, using Xv in xine, worked quite well. They do
re
On Monday 03 December 2001 03:32 pm, Timo Boewing wrote:
> Jeffrey W. Baker wrote:
> > Ogle also has issues.
>
> mh, so far i discovered none, but also watched only two movies with
> it (T2, Episode1). From my point of view, ogle seemed to have the same
> probs on smooth cam movements like all th
Jeffrey W. Baker wrote:
Ogle also has issues.
mh, so far i discovered none, but also watched only two movies with
it (T2, Episode1). From my point of view, ogle seemed to have the same
probs on smooth cam movements like all the other players have (linux
and windoze).
May this be due to har
Thomas Hallaran wrote:
http://www.theorie.physik.uni-goettingen.de/~ostreich/transcode/
http://www.hut.fi/~mhkinnun/downloads/dvd/LXDODRIP.ZIP
Hey, thanx for these hints!
greetings,
Timo
Transcode is pretty much the only option for linux dvd -> other format
conversion (ripping). I haven't used it however.
http://www.theorie.physik.uni-goettingen.de/~ostreich/transcode/
there is also
http://www.hut.fi/~mhkinnun/downloads/dvd/LXDODRIP.ZIP
but it looks like this has not been updated
Hello Chris,
sorry, i cannot further help with this. i was glad that dvds work on
my linux box, but i never ripped one. those i know still use windoze :-(
So far, the old trick "warez dvd rip linux" (or similar) on google
should help.
greetings, Timo
Along the same lines... Is there any good software that will allow me to
take full advantage of some of the multimedia cards that have full A/V in
and out? And also backup a DVD. Just in case the original gets scratched?
Christian Schoenebeck wrote:
-Ursprüngliche Nachricht---
> -Ursprüngliche Nachricht-
> Von: Timo Boewing [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Gesendet: Montag, 3. Dezember 2001 20:38
>
> Hi Chris,
>
> there is also ogle. I also tried vlc and xine, but i got the best
> results with ogle. why? vlc suffered from hangings and segfaults on my
> system, and l
On Mon, 2001-12-03 at 11:37, Timo Boewing wrote:
> >> There are : vlc and xine DVD players.
>
>
> Hi Chris,
>
> there is also ogle. I also tried vlc and xine, but i got the best
> results with ogle. why? vlc suffered from hangings and segfaults on my
> system, and later on i never could get ac
There are : vlc and xine DVD players.
Hi Chris,
there is also ogle. I also tried vlc and xine, but i got the best
results with ogle. why? vlc suffered from hangings and segfaults on my
system, and later on i never could get acceleration to work (e.g. via
libsdl). Xine did also some "pumping
Jérôme Marant wrote:
>> Are there packages for viewing video DVDs? I haven't
>> found some.
>
> Because you didn't search at all. Or you probably don't
> know how to use search engines or apt-cache.
No, I used dselect.
> There are : vlc and xine DVD players.
Ok, they are not part of 'stable'
Christian Schoenebeck wrote:
>
> Hi!
>
> Are there packages for viewing video DVDs? I haven't
> found some.
Because you didn't search at all. Or you probably don't
know how to use search engines or apt-cache.
There are : vlc and xine DVD players.
--
Jérôme Marant
Hi!
Are there packages for viewing video DVDs? I haven't
found some.
Christian Schoenebeck
Following up on my own message to correct a mis-statement.
I wrote:
|> Xine is now very mature and very stable. The Debian packages (even
|> in unstable) lag a little behind,
This is wrong (I was looking in the wrong place). The package xine-ui
in unstable supplies the most up-to-date version of
Patrick Lane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I like Mplayer (www.mplayerhq.hu). To my knowledge there is no debian
> package
>
Some non-offical debs, for testing and unstable:
http://marillat.free.fr/
I'm using the unstable ones, work great.
Jim McCloskey wrote:
David Harrigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
|> Therefore, I'm asking this esteemed group which combo of DVD Player
|> software does it for you..plus what limitations does your chosen bit
|> of software have?
Xine is now very mature and very stable. The D
David Harrigan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
|> Therefore, I'm asking this esteemed group which combo of DVD Player
|> software does it for you..plus what limitations does your chosen bit
|> of software have?
Xine is now very mature and very stable. The Debian packages (eve
Harry Henry Gebel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have a Pentium II, 266 MHz, with 128 MB of RAM. Is this
> sufficient to play DVDs using a software player?
It probably is, but may not be depending on the disk and the player.
Linux software players are generally not as highly optimized as
Windows
On Mon, Oct 15, 2001 at 01:06:16PM -0400, Hall Stevenson wrote:
> > system. I have a Pentium II, 266 MHz, with 128 MB of
> > RAM. Is this sufficient to play DVDs using a software
> > player?
> I believe your video card is a (considerable ??) factor in DVD
> playback too. What kind do you have ??
I
> This reminds me that I've been meaning to ask this
> question for a long time. I have a DVD drive that someone
> gave me when I upgraded their computer, and I was
> wondering if it would be worthwhile to install it in my
> system. I have a Pentium II, 266 MHz, with 128 MB of
> RAM. Is this suffic
On Mon, 15 Oct 2001, Harry Henry Gebel wrote:
> On Mon, Oct 15, 2001 at 04:55:55PM +0200, Sven Hoexter wrote:
> > My favourites are xine and mplayer.
> > xine is GUI based and has a cool looking, starts to support DVD menus but
> > sometimes segfaults with the d4d plugin (you need this for css D
On Mon, Oct 15, 2001 at 04:55:55PM +0200, Sven Hoexter wrote:
> My favourites are xine and mplayer.
> xine is GUI based and has a cool looking, starts to support DVD menus but
> sometimes segfaults with the d4d plugin (you need this for css DVDs)
> http://xine.sourceforge.net
>
> mplayer is comman
ld prefer Therefore, I'm asking this esteemed group which
> combo of DVD Player software does it for you..plus what limitations
> does your chosen bit of software have?
The usual choices are xine (xine.sourceforge.net) and videolan
(www.videolan.org). Videolan hash built-in supp
> Well, I just went out and bought TPF (The Phantom Menace)
> on DVD...
Uhhh, where are you from ?? It's not supposed to be out until
tomorrow... You have friends at a video store or something ??
Hall
. I know which one I would prefer
> Therefore, I'm asking
> this esteemed group which combo of DVD Player software does it for you..plus
> what
> limitations does your chosen bit of software have?
My favourites are xine and mplayer.
xine is GUI based and has a cool looking
Hiya,
Well, I just went out and bought TPF (The Phantom Menace) on DVD. Now, I'm
left
wondering - I could play this on my Windows ME machine, or I could play this
on my
Linux (Debian :) machine. I know which one I would prefer
Therefore, I'm asking
this esteemed group which co
On Mon, Mar 19, 2001 at 12:34:12AM +0200, Eray 'exa' Ozkural wrote:
>
> Any one of you had the chance to try out oms?
>
YES! and it is excellent. I watched a whole comercial dvd (contact) with it
last night on a full screen and with good quality sound. No jerks or
crashing etc. I recommend you try
On Monday 19 March 2001 06:34, Eray 'exa' Ozkural wrote:
> On Mon, 19 Mar 2001, csj wrote:
> > You didn't say why you weren't impressed. But I know of only one
> > Loki's smpeg-plaympeg and it only plays VCDs.
>
> I wasn't because none of them were able to playback a simple
> commercial VCD. It's a
On Mon, 19 Mar 2001, csj wrote:
> You didn't say why you weren't impressed. But I know of only one
> Loki's smpeg-plaympeg and it only plays VCDs.
>
I wasn't because none of them were able to playback a simple commercial
VCD. It's a copy of Lain, a popular anime. The only program that
didn't c
On Monday 19 March 2001 04:35, Eray Ozkural wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Which VCD or/and DVD player would you recommend? I'm currently
> working on packaging mpegorion, but there might be better
> alternatives. I looked at a few other proggies: like xine, but I'm
> not very impre
Hi,
Which VCD or/and DVD player would you recommend? I'm currently
working on packaging mpegorion, but there might be better alternatives.
I looked at a few other proggies: like xine, but I'm not very
impressed.
My problem is that the usual "mtv" is very non-free, limited and
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