Play MPEG Movies Under LinuxPPC 75
Jason Haas writes: "We now have instructions for playing MPEG movies under LinuxPPC, and
they're posted on our Web site on this page. Sam Lantinga of Loki Software wrote a number of the utilities we use (thanks!), along with one by Jan Hubicka. Happily, they're all in RPM format, which shouldn't be a problem for anyone to handle. We also have instructions for editing Netscape's setup to automagically play MPEGs when they're downloaded. It is most cool to see and hear your LinuxPPC box playing a movie." Maybe I can find a nice cheap green iMac to try this on.
Jason Haas (Score:3)
Good (Score:1)
Fuck karma. Post anonymously.
xanim? (Score:4)
Finally (Score:1)
hmm... (Score:1)
I'm not so sure the superfriends mpeg is a good test movie to see if the software is working, it's just skippy and jumpy by compression:)
/. (Score:2)
its kinda funny how stories like this get posted, but useful ones get dropped..
way to go Tim.
Re:the Ninjas Have Won! (Score:4)
#1: If you mean "Why would you run Linux instead of MacOS?" Well, a myriad of reasons actually. MacOS is rather nice in many respects, but programing on it ain't the best experience in the world. (Yes, I've done it.) Also, it plays very well with MacOS (as in can be put on any partition regardless of position and won't (read: won't unless you screw it up) ruin your HFS/HFS+ partitions, so there's no need to ditch MacOS.
#2: If you mean "Why would you run Linux on PPC instead of Linux on Intel?" Well, besides the hardware being more expencive... Linux on PPC is the easiest install/maintain that *I've* ever done. I was shocked at how much of a pain in the arse it was to install on an x86 compared to the absolute breese on PPC. Some of this is starting to go away though, ie LILO cylender restriction gone by-by, so this might not be the case in another year or so. But anyway, that's a good reason.
Yummy, pancakes.
can it play vcd? (Score:1)
is popular in some foregin countries.
Re:hmm... (Score:1)
Hint #1: Whenever you ask for help like that, at least say what kind of computer you have.
Hint #2: Whenever you say something didn't work for you, say why. If you don't know why, either speculate or explain what happened.
Hint #3: When you ask for help, don't post anonymously. It prevents people like me from getting in touch with you personally, instead of throwing something out in a public forum.
Re:xanim? (Score:3)
I don't know about playing xanim on linuxPPC, but on my 500 mhz, AMD K6-2, with 128 megs of RAM, mpeg playback under xanim is really crappy. smpeg is *much* better.
Adam
Another solution (Score:2)
But anyway, I've found mtv to be a very good player. Install mtv and it comes with another program called mtvp that doesn't have the timeout (or the gui) of mtv.
Full screen mode is very good and all of that.
~Chris
Happily RPM?!? (Score:3)
I for one, can't understand this favoring of a distro's packetmanager instead of just plain old
Even if it needs to be a binary package, then USE THE STANDARD TOOLS(tar + gzip) so people that don't want to infest their system have a chance.
-H
sorry for any inconvenience (Score:1)
And when you say "stories like this get posted, but useful ones get dropped"
timothy
Re:Happily RPM?!? (Score:1)
If you need something to watch on it... (Score:2)
...try Tripping the Rift [trippingtherift.com]. It's MPEG format.
(Warning: it's for mature audiences, analogous to an R-rated movie. And it's five minutes long. You may break out in uncontrollable laughter.)
-- Sunlighter
Re:Happily RPM?!? (Score:1)
I wrote an email to Redhat complaining about this, never got an answer, and I even kept trying to download it for a few weeks.
So, why should I bother with a packagemanager that dosen't work the right way, that I couldn't download, and thoose who made it didn't even care to reply on my mail(It was even polite)?
-H
Re:xanim? (Score:2)
decent free mpeg player? (Score:1)
MPEG movies in ASCII Art? (Score:2)
still... (Score:1)
Breaking News (Score:2)
"With this new addition to LinuxPPC, I expect Apple to abandon any further development on any OSes they may be researching. Clearly, the ability to play MPEG movies is something else nobody can boast." said Sam Lantinga, who wrote some utilities used for this technological leap. "Luckily for our competitiors, nobody is using such new technology... it should be ages before anyone can harness this new power," Lantinga contiuned.
In the Intel market, Linux also continues to dominate, due to its ease of installation, consistent interface and clear documentation.
Re:MPEG movies in ASCII Art? (Score:2)
It's especially entertaining if you have a TV card; you can watch TV in ascii!
Re:Happily RPM?!? (Score:1)
Also, RPM is just an ar (cpio) archive of a few
ar and tar have been part of unix since time immemorial, so it's not like RPMs are are mysterious new format, or anything - the junk at the beginning is also fully documented, but does very little in RPM 3.0 other than say "this is an RPM, not an ordinary ar file".
Find rpm2cpio [rpmdp.org] (it's in the RPM source distribution) and it will convert the rpm to cpio. Or get alien [linuxburg.net], and use it. It's not hard.
(For more details: man ar, man tar, man cpio)
Why Here? (Score:2)
Is Slashdot now going to start posting every Linux newbie-config page that gets submitted? Of course not. This is News for Nerds! Timothy should re-check his audience.
huh? (Score:1)
What About Quicktime? (Score:2)
For a more broadly useful video format, Apple will have to port QuickTime to Linux. For a company that used to officially support MkLinux, you'd think they'd get off of their collective ass and at least release binaries. Hell, you can even stream Quicktime [streamingserver.org] from Linux, but you can't watch it.
There used to be, as of a few months ago, a petition up at neutron.resnet.gatech.edu/qt-petit ion.html [gatech.edu], but that appears to have gone away. (As has the server.) Maybe the guy graduated and took his server with him.
I'm told that xanim plays Quicktime, but I've never tried it. Still, I'd like to have a plug-in, and something that supports that full functionality of Quicktime. I wish Apple would do something about it.
-Waldo
Re:hmm... (Score:1)
#1 Commodore 64
#2 Must be a defective cd the 1541 Won't read it
#3 I can't install email on the 64 so how can I get an account on /.
Other PowerPC distros (Score:1)
I am a happy used of debian/powerpc and there is a slackware/powerpc too I think
Re:Where's the source? (Score:2)
no exact url handy, but smpeg is deginitely open, hopefully you can find it. It works nicely (WAY better than xanim). If you want a nice frontend, I have a debian package called gtv-smpeg that uses it and wraps a small, but nice, gtk interface around it.
Re:Another solution (Score:3)
Re:Why not QuickTime? (Score:4)
Re:sorry for any inconvenience (Score:1)
Jason Haas - sorta OT (Score:1)
Interesting that Jason is back at the keyboard after his very bad car crash. I'm wondering how that experience has affected him....
Re:Finally (Score:1)
Re:Jason Haas - sorta OT (Score:1)
Glad to have you back, Jason.
Re:Jason Haas (Score:1)
Re:Happily RPM?!? (Score:1)
Re:Jason Haas (Score:2)
Try reading before blindly moderating something down as "offtopic". Especially considering a post placed afterward on the same topic is sitting at +3.
Re:Jason Haas (Score:2)
Off-topic my ass! Jason has been the marketing voice of LinuxPPC. He also been a good poster on the LinuxPPC user group discussion list (I read the archive list). About a month ago, Jason posted an update (I'm back!) on this list, but AFAIK hasn't posted since then. Just seeing his name here is great news. Rayban stated that he thought that it was great that Jason is back, and I concur.
Moderation started because some assholes trolled on a story about when Stevens, the author of many great books on IPC and UNIX, passed away. While many of the comments on Stevens were obvious trolls, others were based on quasi-antilinux sentiment. Compters and Linux are not life and death. F*ck me, but, I'm starting to believe and *agree* with the trolls about moderation.
You moderators that are clueless about life give an interesting slant on news for nerds and life that does not matter. For you others, bump up Rayban's (#2 post) comment. F*ck mine. I have karma whore points, and I'll post at default 2.
Did I say that this pisses me off. Anyway, good luck Haas and your wife Cassie.
Re:Another solution (Score:2)
Re:sorry for any inconvenience (Score:2)
For me at least, I like to hit freshmeat everyday, and see what apps are being started, or being worked on...a lot of times I'll run into things I wasn't looking for, but would be really useful.
besides, if a LinuxPPC user wants to play an MPEG file, they will most likely hit freshmeat, not
which useful ones are you thinking about?
OK, that was a guess on my part...but the thing is that we don't get to see what stories you drop. It would be really nice if there was a "back page" on slashdot..where we could see the stories you drop...not all of them, just the ones that you thought about for second before killing it. We don't have to be able to comment on the stories, just have a link to them. Maybe you guys could create a subset of moderators that would be able to moderate the backpage...and if a story gets moderated up to like 10 or something (a high number) then it gets resubmitted for your approval to get put on the front page.
You guys would still totally control what goes on the front page...and the backpage, but we get to see more of what other slashdotters are interested in. There isn't much room for abuse, since you guys still get to say what goes up on the pages. (loads of people will now complain about why StoryX got onto the backpage, and not the front page, but people will always complain)
Just an idea.
[1] Granted, alot of current users may have already decided that they cannot play MPEG files, and are not looking...
Re:What About Quicktime? (Score:1)
At this point won't we be much closer to getting a Linux version?
Or am I reading too much into this?
Re:Jason Haas (Score:1)
The "real" news here is that Jason is back among the active participants of this arena. How 'bout an update on your condition, Jason?
Re:Happily RPM?!? (Score:1)
I'm NOT dissing the GPL. Where the hell did you get that from? I'm anti-RH, so I must be anti-GPL? Please.
On a kinder note, I must compliment the moderator who knocked me down. I said it was flamebait, and it was, and I was rated so. Good job. Most of the mods label flamebait was "offtopic", trolls as "flamebait", and offtopic posts as "trolls". Keep up the good work!
(Moderators: This post is not flamebait, but it is offtopic. That sounds like a fair moderation to me.)
---------///----------
This post is not redundant, please don't moderate it as such. I repeat, this post is not redundant.
I fail to see the importance of this newsbit (Score:1)
Re:can it play vcd? (Score:1)
Foreign? C'mon. This is the Internet! The only people foreign nowadays are those who have problems spelling English.
Rene - from some small European country-
Re:Why not QuickTime? (Score:1)
So the Linux community doesn't want QuickTime for QT, they want it because it has the best codec. Why doesn't the community spend more effort on making a kick ass OSS quicktime codec?
It's like Apple gave the community a car with no engine, and the community decides they'd rather build a vehicle from the ground up.
Pride over convenience?
assuming apple will release qt for osx (Score:1)
Why is that a troll? (Score:1)
That's a silly bit of logic by Mr. Stallman (Score:1)
Stallman: 'programmers tend to favor polyamorous or non-monogamous relationships'
Umm, men period tend to favor polyamorous or non-monogamous relationships. The fact that programmers are overwhelmingly male skews his viewpoint -- the majority of female programmers that I know don't jibe with his statement.
Well, it's been nice knowin' y'all, even the ones who've flamed me, but after contemplating Richard Stallman having sex, I think I'm going to go kill myself now.
Cheers,
ZicoKnows@hotmail.com
Re:Happily RPM?!? (Score:1)
Dependency traps get bad enough using Red Hat alone - it has to get worse if you try to mix Red Hat with SuSE and Mandrake.
Slackware, Debian (Score:1)
Why doesn't Red Hat at least *fix* the problems with RPM, and upgrade the technology to be at least competitive with Debian? I should hope that Red Hat hasn't already fallen into the pit of compatbility that killed Microsoft's quality.
not even most of freshmeat (Score:1)
youll also have to get a three button mouse and get it to work (which may be simple, i dont know) apple better do something about this for the maya port. even the NT version requires 3 mouse buttons.
Re:Happily RPM?!? (Score:1)
Er... AIX uses backup/restore archives for its' packages which can be bodged into the system manually, but should be installed using smit.
Solaris uses .pkg files, which again, should be installed using pkgadd.
Can someone please explain why RPM is so evil? Why is is so unreasonable to ask people to use rpm2cpio when I'm quite prepared to take time building RPMs for myself when only tar.gz files exist?
Re:can it play vcd? (Score:1)
There not here. Will ne1 pc me?
*shudder*
-legolas
i've looked at love from both sides now. from win and lose, and still somehow...
smpeg for ppc has been out for ages. (Score:1)
Re:I fail to see the importance of this newsbit (Score:1)
--
PPC right here dude (Score:2)
Granted, it only runs under MacOS, and even then in typical MicroShaft fashion, only plays streaming media. ie If you want to play an MS-encoded AVI that you downloaded elsewhere, it won't work.
Pope
Freedom is Slavery! Ignorance is Strength! Monopolies offer Choice!
Re:ok, (Score:1)
The proliferation of the RPM format is rather disgusting. Not everybody runs redhat, and there are those of us that treasure the cleanlyness of our filesystems. If developers want to release RPM, that is just fine, but whatever happened to good old tar.gz ?
Re:I fail to see the importance of this newsbit (Score:2)
Why QuickTime Player Is Not On Linux (Score:1)
Um, Apple's position on this is very clear and simple: "Where's the revenue model?"
If you want to watch QT on Linux, you have three options:
1. Come up with a revenue model that is defensible to Apple shareholders. I can guarantee direct delivery to Frank Casanova if you DO
2. Have Red Hat or somebody license QuickTime. You may have noticed in the news that Kodak did last week. Apple will license QT to anyone who ponies up a reasonable amount of cash, and "reasonable" is probably "not too bloody much" in the context of a new player platform I'd be pretty confident.
3. The QuickTime file format is publicly documented. Download it at
http://developer.apple.com/techpubs/quicktime/qtd
and put your sorry whining ass to work.
Re:Why QuickTime Player Is Not On Linux (Score:1)
Where was the revenue model when giving away BSD? Apple feels free to profit on open-source. They should be giving something back. Quicktime seems like a no-brainer.
Apple has shown that they're not so good at developing technolgies that have much market penetration. Quicktime is an exception, and they should have enough sense to take that for all it's worth. The revenue stream comes from Quicktime as a whole. If they were looking at straight revenue, they would have skipped making Quicktime for the Mac and just released it for Windows. When developing a standard, it's best for it to be just that: a standard.
BTW, my "sorry whining ass" works on plenty. I don't feel that it's inappropriate to point out work that should be done when I can't actually do it myself.
-Waldo
Re:PPC right here dude (Score:1)
Ramble on!
mfspr r3, pc / lvxl v0, 0, r3 / li r0, 16 / stvxl v0, r3, r0
Re:Why QuickTime Player Is Not On Linux (Score:1)
You mean Darwin? Because that plus Darwin Streaming Server equals a dedicated media server, which would be made platform independent without a large direct investment. As you noted yourself, that is indeed coming along nicely on both ends. The regular Open Source quality/contribution benefits also make a pretty good tradeoff for CoreOS code, given that the source is pretty much open already and the parts that weren't (the driver model, mainly) it is to Apple's benefit to have other people adopt in any case. Which they would do, if they were smart, since the Darwin driver model beats everybody else's all to hell.
Apple feels free to profit on open-source. They should be giving something back.
Uh-huh. And if you think the board or the shareholders would tolerate the presence in the company of anyone who thought that was a justification for open sourcing QuickTime, you have some serious dealing with reality issues, my friend.
If they were looking at straight revenue, they would have skipped making Quicktime for the Mac and just released it for Windows.
You seriously misunderstand QuickTime's value to Apple, which is as a technology used for media *creation* and as such is a significant driver of hardware sales. Client distribution is of comparative unimportance, as that contributes to hardware sales in fairly indirect fashion. Client distribution on a vanishingly tiny consumer installed base fringe OS like Linux is of an importance indistinguishable from zero.
If you manage to get large swathes of the video creation industry to demand Linux versions of After Effects et al. and/or large swathes of the grandma consumer market to demand QuickTime Player on their Linux desktops
I don't feel that it's inappropriate to point out work that should be done when I can't actually do it myself.
No
Re:Happily RPM?!? (Score:1)
*** SIGNATURE WANTED. BIG REWARD. It's name is "Bubba"
Re:Happily RPM?!? (Score:1)
rpms compiled on a Red Hat system will depend on Red Hat-installed libraries, and configuration.
Every difference between Red Hat, and the other distributions, makes it harder to use rpms across distributions.
Re:Good (Score:1)
Whoever is working on xanim, please, for the love of YHVH, *make it work properly*. I have exactly two movies out of my entire collection which work right with xanim. Thats it. I have 2 avis which work without sound (which is a shame, since they're anime music vids). Thats pretty much it...
- Rei
...For Debian (Score:1)
Hooray for LinuxPPC and all, but they aren't the only source for these tools on PowerPC -- Debian has 'em, too, and has for some time.
I looked at the LinuxPPC page, read the descriptions of the RPMs, then did apt-cache search SDL, which told me
Then I did
and my system happily installed these and two additional packages (libggi2 and libgii0), and I was in business.
It's not like the Debian people scrambled to catch up, either. I'm using potato (frozen), which hasn't updated packages for PPC for several days.
Linux != x86 Linux; LinuxPPC != PPC Linux.
Re:Happily RPM?!? (Score:1)
Or, if you want a program that handles all the major Linux package formats _well_, then get alien. It does deb, rpm, slp, and (of course) tgz. You can also just tell it to unpack.
Most programs will work on other distros, even if they were packaged with RPM. I use Debian myself, but there are a lot of people that have an easier time dealing with an RPM than with anything else, so I accept the fact that people distribute stuff in RPMs. Just be glad that RPM is a well-defined standard, and that there are several Free programs to deal with them. Sounds pretty good to me!
#define X(x,y) x##y
Re:Why QuickTime Player Is Not On Linux (Score:1)
Sure, that's easy. It's only a matter of time 'til Microsoft comes up with a competing video format (or somebody else) that proves to be a threat to Apple. The stronger a hold that they have in the market, the better that they are. Permitting more platforms to both create and view their format will result in a better market hold, and therefore make them less vulnerable to such attacks.
Seems pretty straightforward to me.
-Waldo
Re:Happily RPM?!? (Score:1)
The original Linux distributions, eons ago, were based on tar + gzip. Then the Redhat boys came along and decided tar just wasn't good enough -- it doesn't handle non-files very well nor does it carry any type of specs in the archive. They designed a package system centered on cpio which will archive almost anything with a custom header containing a variety of specifications. All of the distributions that followed adopted the Redhat paradigm of "packages" -- most of them just using the verbatium rpm.
Don't get me wrong; a package format is a good thing. Something other than tar is always a good thing
Not to sound like Evil from Time Bandits, but... If I were designing a distribution, I'd start with package management; 8 o'clock, day one. Personally, I like the solaris methodology... a package needs to have the ability to install components onto root and others to where ever the user wants. It also has to have the ability to be patched without completely reinstalling the selected package. It also has to have the ability to detect changes from the package base so as to prevent destruction of customizations, etc. [and so forth...]
Re:Why not QuickTime? (Score:1)
The Linux community wants QuickTime to be able to play quicktime movies that get to them.
It's like Apple gave the community a car with no engine, and the community decides they'd rather build a vehicle from the ground up.
No, it's more like the Apple gave the community complete car [1], but which can only run on roads [2] built by Apple. Which is fine; only Apple prohibits the community to use that Apple-built roads.
So the value of "gift" is very, very low (I'd say null, but it has same educational value I guess). By supporting it, community would only show that it is happy when being treated like that. Since it is not, it does not want to use something that is useless to them.
[1] being QuickTime player
[2] being the codec in question
Thanks! (Score:2)
I can now use a computer for at least two hours, and that's only with one good eye! Who knows what I'll be up to when they give me a new lens for my left eye.
BTW, FYI, there are progress updates on the www.linuxppc.com web page.
Take care,
Re:Happily RPM?!? (Score:1)
Patching of RPMs could be done by rpm -ivh --force installing an RPM that only replaces one or two files. --verify will fail for the old package on the files that were replaced, but that's expected.
RPM does preserve files tagged as %config in the .spec file. If an RPM you use doesn't preserve the config, submit a bug report to the packager.
The only thing I wish RPM did do (and it could be made to do it using postinstall scripts) would be to merge your changes to the config relative to the old config into the new config file. But I realise that there's a big can of worms to be opened just down that road...
Re:Happily RPM?!? (Score:1)
RPM has a great number of advantages over the package management Slackware (used to) do (I used Slackware back in 2.2.0 days and moved to Red Hat because I saw the advantages RPM offered). Can you find out which package 'owns' a given file? Can you determine which files in a package have changed since installation? Can you determine which packages might break when you upgrade a given shared library? Can you easily rebuild a new version of the package in exactly the same way Pat Volkerding did using the same compile-time options? Certainly none of these were possible in the Slackware 2.2.0 days...