Ogle Does CSS and DVD Menus 158
javilon noted that a new DVD Player for Linux has appeared, and this one supports CSS and is the first player to implement menus. It's called
Ogle and is developed by a few students at Chalmers University of Technology ins Sweden. It's really exciting to see several different groups independently and together developing players. The only question is when will the MPAA give up?
That's right Taco ... (Score:1)
GNOME GUI (Score:1)
What about China? Apex was disciplined... not. (Score:1)
Ha!
So copying and reselling stuff (movies, games, CDs, etc.) is 100% legal there. Som May records makes a living selling lower priced copies of various media. Now if a web site in taiwant puts up local legal stuff for downloading on a global internet?...
Re:The MPAA may be careful in who the go after. (Score:1)
Most probably you are wrong. From a copyright law point of view they don't have much of an case here in Sweden since this is about fair use which is quite liberally defined (at least for the moment). In January this year the swedish deputy minster of trad Ulrica Messing said in a newspaper interview that she had a) downloaded music from the net b) made a CD from this music and c) given it away. This of course irritated the hell out of the local recording industry bigwigs and an district attorney took a look at the case and decided that there wasn't even grounds for a preliminary investigation. Why? Because this was just a case of making a copy for personal use and not an act of distribution (i.e. it was not several copies and it was for private use). For those who can read Swedish see http://www.aftonbladet.se/vss/nyheter/story/0,278
That leaves the MPAA henchmen with the possibility of claiming that this is a part of their trade secrets but that they would have to prove in court. And I have a feeling that the standard of what's defined as trade secrets in Sweden is a little higher than just a few lines of code.
As for what Chalmers will do only time can tell but I hardly think they will suspend their computing priviliges. Swedish universities are generally quite levelheaded when it comes to these things since they get their money from the state and don't risk the same kind of punitive damages here as in Sweden.
who would play a dvd on a monitor instead of a TV (Score:1)
Re:cool (Score:1)
So its pretty much like every other Linux program, then?...
Re:Exciting? (Score:1)
Re:YES! (Score:2)
Re:Media (Score:2)
Start Windows and look for a program called "dvdplay" - run it - and you'll see it's missing 1 part - the DirectShow part with DVD encoding...
That part needs to be purchased from one of the Windows DVD players companies around..
not all of us run linux... (Score:1)
Re:Commercial DVD (Score:1)
_____
Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
Re:Hacker Effort (Score:1)
There are a lot of stipulations, and then we're more or less where we were before - we have a DVD player, but it can't be extended or improved, it will probably only be available for Linux/x86, and interested people still can't learn how it works.
How is this even an improvement?
_____
Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:1)
In short, I used to think that would be a big problem - but it hasn't been a problem anywhere near on the order I expected.
_____
Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
Re:Port to Max OS X? (Score:1)
_____
Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
Re:heh (Score:1)
i.e., don't claim it unless you're ready to provide.
_____
Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
Re:Give Up? (Score:1)
Besides, a serious pirating operation would just purchase a DVD duplicator and make their copies that way - it'd pay for itself quickly enough.
_____
Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
Re:Exciting? (Score:2)
Wasn't that long ago a guy e-mailed the OMS devel mailing list to say that he thought some high-profile Linux company should just license the DVD book specs because NAV support would take too long. Now look - players are actually starting to support DVD navigation, without the DVD book specs. So yeah, it's gonna take time, but as the saying goes, Rome wasn't built in a day.
_____
Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
Re:Good for linux. (Score:1)
2) What? Like $60-$100 inkjets?
3) That's odd. They run well enough on my 400Mhz system. Although, the WHOLE enviroment is not strictly necessary.
3) Again, then what's really wrong with them.
Really, you could have thought of a whole hell of a lot else if your issues are more real than rhetoric.
Re:Is it just me... (Score:1)
Re:Hacker Effort (Score:1)
There is nothing "illegal" in a citizen choosing to decode their DVD under Linux. This is INFACT a legal use of DVD technology.
It is no less legal than the "fair use" that photocopiers are often utilized for. It isn't even any less legal than using a photocopier to reproduce your own works.
It is only made artificially illegal by a law that is itself illegal and was bought primarily to give publishers "rights" that they were never intended to have.
The DMCA and the Copyright Act are not the extent of the law. Try and remember that when you are busy being a corporate bootlicker and turning yourself into a serf.
Re:Media (Score:2)
DVD is one of those areas where a large corporation can come along and club you to death with a lawsuit. DeCSS has been litigated against since it was born.
This is not the usual "volunteers" vs. "paid programmers" situation.
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
They still group all the DVD stogether, which makes browsing difficult.
Re:menus (Score:2)
If I click on "Scenes," I am presented with thumnail images of 18 different chapter, ranging from "Main Titles" and "The Great Director" to "The final Frame" and "Credits." Clicking on any of those thumbnails allows me to jump to the appropriate scene in the movie.
If I click on Bonus materials, I can view several interviews, featurettes and associated movie trailers.
"Languages" allows me to select alternate soundtracks-- DTS, AC-3, Director's Commentary, or a French dub.
Finally, clicking on "Play" simply plays the movie (preceeded, alas, by a 60 second montage of Universal's other DVD releases).
Menus are simply a nice feature to have-- and are a userfriendly method of orgainizing a often bewildering array of special features and supplementary meterial. It is technically possible to access this material without menus--but it's difficult and cumbersome.
The menu specifications also allow for simple games (e.g. Dragon's Lair).
Re:menus (Score:2)
LsDVD had these features a year ago. (Score:3)
Re:Media (Score:1)
Or, were you looking for the ability to mix/create video [heroinewarrior.com] or record [sourceforge.neta] video in one [stack.nl] of many [divx.euro.ru] ways.
or did you just want to play those MPEG-1 [195.139.204.136] (there are several others) or MPEG-2 [sourceforge.net] or or [sourceforge.net]
Basically the point I'm trying to make is that the multimedia stuff is there already. just use it.
The one piece I know of thats missing is Sorenson (sp?) codec quicktime player. anyone doing this, or know of a project that is?
Re:hmm (Score:1)
[ist.utl.pt]
Complete Xine
Re:I assume it works for somebody out there (Score:2)
Re:hmm (Score:2)
See
CSS for Xine [nbci.com]
Re:MPAA, Same power outside of US? (Score:3)
It all started when they harassed a Norwegian coder, so I'll take it that as yes.
If Hague Convention goes through as is. (Score:2)
Re:Dammit, I think I love your country! (Score:1)
Also, One of our ministers recvently downloaded a CD full of mp3 songs and challenged the ploice to arrest her for illegal copying. The local district attorney stated that she had done nothing wrong, and that only the ones supplying her with the songs could possibly be charged.
/Janne
Re:When willt he MPAA give up? (Score:1)
Re:The MPAA may be careful in who the go after. (Score:3)
University students are typically fair game for cease-and-desist lawsuits, though. A university will certainly defend faculty, but I haven't seen many that won't bend over backwards to help anyone that looks like a lawyer.
More likely, the first sign of MPAA activity these students will lose computing priveledges, have their dorm rooms searched, personal effects confiscated, and possibly have their academic futures sunk.
Hopefully I'm wrong.
c.
Re:The MPAA may be careful in who the go after. (Score:1)
Laugh, I've used stuff running at Chalmers remotely - they have a truly enlightened view of computing services. Cheers guys.
~Cederic
Re:The MPAA may be careful in who the go after. (Score:4)
At Chalmers we also have a rather nice lawyer, who actually defends Chalmers (and I want to be defended, it's "my" computer system the MPAA will be after). He also enjoys going to court, if we just get him on the right side. :-)
The thing is that this player has been developed in Sweden. Sweden currently does not have software patents, or any equivalence to the DMCA, and the chance of making this development look like a criminal offence is very very small. Even for the MPAA.
We also have something to use to bend Chalmers back the right way if they seem to mushy against the MPAA - PR. Chalmers gets lots and lots of good PR from this player, and that is an argument that the leadership here can certainly accept.
Exciting? (Score:5)
Exciting? I've got a wheel for you to re-invent if you find that sort of thing exciting. I don't know about you, but I'd rather see ONE quality Linux DVD player than five unfinished ones, each in a different stage of brokenness.
Mod me down, they're your points...
Are any of them threaded? (Score:1)
Re:Spelling (Score:1)
Implausible - his spelling was like this before Andover came knocking.
Caution: contents may be quarrelsome and meticulous!
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
The studios are making noises about changing this and instituting a rental-pricing tier, and the rental shops are fighting it tooth and nail. It'll probably happen sooner or later, though.
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Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
Chelloveck
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
Chelloveck
Re:Ogle? (Score:1)
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Give up? (Score:5)
If MPAA ever "gives up" on keeping the lid on DVDs, it will be because they're abandoning DVD altogether. And it might make sense for them to do that pretty soon. If you have bought a lot of your favorite movies on DVD, then it's time for them to introduce a new format so they can sell them to you again.
So when MPAA gives up, be afraid, because it means they're getting ready to ream you.
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Re:Check Your Links CmdrTaco! (Score:2)
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Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
This *will* happen with TV also when HD becomes the standard, encryption crap and all. No TV's to buy? *Have* to buy our super duper HD set (with encryption of course)....
I assume it works for somebody out there (Score:2)
I haven't had much luck with DVD players on Linux. I've got a dual 700/PIII, 128 megs, SuSE 7.1, and I've tried (in the past few days) vlc (VideoLan), xmovie, xine (about three weeks ago), and just now, olga.
Most don't do anything, vlc runs for a few minutes and dies. I've got the latest stable releases of just about everything (kernel, XFree, etc), and 'it just don't work'. I'm not a newbie here - everything seems to compile, libraries are found, watching stdout dosen't show anything obvious, I've tried different DVDs... Either I've got an oddball system, or it's not quite ready for prime time (although watching the opening Owl sequence of Labrynth is nice).
Hopefully it's just a matter of waiting a few months for things to get a bit more stable, but for right now, I have to use my $120 hardware decoder - an Apex 600A one shelf above my workstation.
--
Evan
menus (Score:2)
Re:I assume it works for somebody out there (Score:2)
This new one, ogle, has menu support, but seems to suck otherwise.
nothing does multiple angles well that I've seen. a lot of titles use it now (like the Matrix) and if they aren't dealt with you get funny things happening. A perfect disc to try out a player is Princess Monononononoke: it is 16x9, has subs, and is multi angle all in the first 30 seconds. it's a very good test.
Is it just me... (Score:5)
And the MPAA thinks there is no reason for hacking CSS. Go fig.
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
The signal quality is really good, but it sometimes take a little time getting the right orientation of the antennas. It's really worth it though and it's surprisingly cheap.
The remote that comes with it is really good, too. It's similar to the MouseRemote which I have, and love.
Diversity is good for survial (Score:3)
In an ideal world, one good player would be a better situation, but in the current case of dvd players, I don't think so. One player made by one company/group means one single point of failure, and single point to be closed down/intimidated.
Whack-A-Mole is a very easy game to play if there is only one mole, you know.
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Re:Media (Score:3)
What free software developers can't be assed to do is polish their software for use by mere mortals. Not many people have the motive to do it, because that last 25% of the work just doesn't look like it's there to a developer. And if you pay the developer, who cares about the documentation? You can save money and just ask the developer if you have questions.
Boss of nothin. Big deal.
Son, go get daddy's hard plastic eyes.
Re:Port to Max OS X? (Score:2)
Re:YES! (Score:2)
Imagine having multiple styles on a DVD, then applying a CSS to them. The user could then customize the appearance of the menus.
This would be really cool for consumer DVDs like wedding videos, or anything that was created for an individual or specific entity.
Just a thought...
YES! (Score:4)
Whoohoo!
What? Oh..ok. I see. OK.
Nevermind.
Re:Media (Score:2)
although I still don't understand why people are so bent on seeing a dvd on their massive 21 inch monitor rather than their 36 inch tv)
Because not all of us have either a tv or a need for one? If the Software DVD player does an adequate job, then why buy a tv?
The one piece I know of thats missing is Sorenson (sp?) codec quicktime player. anyone doing this, or know of a project that is?
There was talk on the xine mailing list of trying to get Quicktime working in a similar manner to the windows media codecs. The FAQ for mplayer seems to indicate that the mplayer authors looked into doing it, but weren't capable of getting it to work
LinDVD is available on Thinkpads (Score:3)
Its odd people continue to get this wrong when its one of the few things the Open Source and Free Software foundation people unanimously agree upon.
Anyway, LinDVD is available as OEM deal, with Caldera OpenLinux eDesktop 2.4 and LinDVD, on the A20 series, IIRC. GIYF.
But yes, they should be more widely available. Why not send a message to Intervideo asking them for a release date if you'd like to buy a license?
Its probably the only player asides from PowerDVD for Linux (embedded only) that can play film at full quality on a Celeron 300.
Re:Port to Max OS X? (Score:3)
[TMB]
SMOG(tm) brand processed air (Score:5)
From: Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce
To: Slashdot Readership Re: Use of the SMOG trademark
The Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce has worked hard to provide our visitors with the premium SMOG brand of processed air particles, and we feel it is a unique product in the world today. Thus, we must protect our unique product image with a trademark on the term SMOG.
We do not object to use of the slang term "smog" to describe unsolicited commercial air particles, although we do object to the use of our product image in association with that term. Also, if the term is to be used, it should be in all lowercase letters to distinguish it from our trademark SMOG, which should be used with all uppercase letters.
Sincerely,
The Los Angeles Chamber of Commerce
www.lachamber.net
cool (Score:5)
In short, this looks like it will be really neat but it is definately not ready for widespread use yet.
Re:The MPAA will give up when... (Score:5)
It's not nice to tease people.
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
Re:Hacker Effort (Score:2)
"As long as the MPAA thinks they can make people pay for the rights to develop software..."
Now look at what you wrote:
"They don't. They think they can make people pay for the rights to develop software..."
You can argue that I cut off your qualifier. I am arguing that the qualifier doesn't make any difference. For one specific purpose and one only, they're restricting your ability to develop software. That's one purpose too many.
If it infringed their copyright somehow, then I could see them restricting the _use_ of such work. Not the development, the distribution, or the discussion of it. Are photocopiers illegal? No. Are photocopier schematics illegal? No. Are photocopier sales illegal? No. Is using a photocopier illegal? In some cases yes, but that doesn't make the rest of the chain illegal.
As for your other point; "What confuses me most is why people think we have some inalienable right to free movies and music, and the RIAA and MPAA are evil because they make you pay for the product they find, fund, distribute, and market."
1) This has nothing to do with free movies and music. Never has. It's all about letting me watch movies that I HAVE LEGALLY PURCHASED (yes, for real money, from the store) without having to run Windows. Nobody ever told me I couldn't build a VCR out of rusty tin cans and earwax or at least that I wasn't allowed to
As for the RIAA, I pesonally consider them to be entirely evil because they charge large sums of money for music and then keep it, instead of distributing it to the artists. Musicians get a pittance, and the RIAA makes gobs, which is not how things should be.
Re:Hacker Effort (Score:5)
Yep! It sure does.
Hold on a second here, I'm not actually being facetious. Consider this:
There are no licensed DVD players for any linux (not to mention all the Unices, OS/2, etc. etc.) In fact, no Linux (etc.) developers have licences to produce one, as far as we know. Thus, ANY DVD PLAYER DEVELOPMENT on Linux is a de facto 'line in the sand' against the MPAA. There's no way for it not to be.
And for that matter, that's the way it should be. As long as the MPAA thinks they can make people pay for the rights to develop software, we should agressively ignore their decrees and do everything in our power to defeat them.
Remember: They are selling you the right to develop your own software. That's simply unconscionable.
Too bad Indrema went bust (Score:2)
The MPAA will give up when... (Score:2)
Not going to happen since they have a strangle hold on the mindless masses.
2. All lawyers die.
Ha!
3. When the bad publicity from their trying to take away our rights becomes enough so that it has the potential to hit them in their pocketbooks.
As long as the MPAA is referred to as the "MPAA", a faceless entity, that's not going to happen either. Sure I have a vague notion that Sony, et. all is in there, but I usually don't make the connection right off and neither do the masses.
Conclusion: Dig yourself a trench, it's going to be a long haul.
Re:Media (Score:2)
DVD (see this artitcle although I still don't understand why people are so bent on seeing a dvd on their massive 21 inch monitor rather than their 36 inch tv).
Its not my 21 inch monitor, at home, I want to watch DvD's on, it is my Dell Inspirion 3800 Portable running RedHat 7.1, on airplanes and motel rooms, that I want to play DvD's on. Also some of us use computers as all-in-one entertainment centers and have them hooked up to our 36 inch TV's.
Jesus died for sombodies sins, but not mine.
The MPAA may be careful in who the go after. (Score:5)
What can the MPAA say about Chalmers? I know the University is not directly involved, but they are students there.
It should be the message, not the messenger that should be looked at.
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
DVDs do indeed offer signifigant benifits over VHS - you never need to rewind a DVD, they are much sturdier, and last longer. People are moving to DVDs - if I'm going to buy a movie, it better be on DVD, since I don't have a VCR!
DVDs themselves often come with "extras" that VHS doesn't - like behind the scenes stuff, extra audio tracks, "Dolby Surround," and other things that make them more valuable to customers than a VHS tape. Simply put, I'll bet you that DVDs are winning on actual market merit, rather than being forced down consumers throats.
Especially since the average American consumer doesn't give a rat's tail about the rest of the world, and could care less about region coding, especially because most of the movies that they'd want are released in Region 1. So DVDs are probably going to take over VHS, because DVDs are a product who's time has come. They have the right features at the right price and are convenient to the consumer - a winning product in the marketplace.
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What will Linux distros do? (Score:2)
But then again, Red Hat might already have passed the threshold of "can survive nasty litigation". They're profitable now, remember. Would be fun to watch.
Re:Spelling (Score:2)
It actually refers to a type of special magical charm
Inde [dictionary.com] =Azure, a bright blue color. Note the relation to the word "Indigo"
Pendant [dictionary.com] = a variety of common meanings, including an ornament worn on a necklace, etc.
Check out the Vinny the Vampire [eplugz.com] comic strip
MPAA can't do anything (Score:2)
Port to Max OS X? (Score:3)
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
I have one. I don't wish to move the tv & stereo into the office, move the office to the living room, or run long wires all over the place. Computer speakers are not high fidelity.
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:2)
Re:Gee, I might buy some DVD's now. (Score:5)
Re:I assume it works for somebody out there (Score:2)
hmm (Score:2)
Re:hmm (Score:2)
MPAA give up? (Score:2)
Anyone remember Milquetoast [tripod.com], the Bloom County/Outland cockroach? How he'd plant subliminal messages by whispering in ears at night... This is how I visualize it:
Milquetoast into the ears of RIAA and MPAA executives: Sue everyone, fear the future, keep your lawyers on the gravy train, leave out a bag of stale cheese puffs.
-- .sig are belong to us!
All your
When willt he MPAA give up? (Score:4)
Re:Good to see... (Score:3)
that is all.
Check Your Links CmdrTaco! (Score:5)
Dude! The LiViD link [livid.org]links to the wrong place [linuxvideo.org]! You should check your [cowboyneal.org] links [google.com]to make sure they go to the right place [microsoft.com].
Perhaps someone [microsoft.com]could write an open source [microsoft.com] Perl [python.org] script [microsoft.com] that checks links [microsoft.com] and put it in Slashcode [phpslash.org] so that CmdrTaco [cowboyneal.org] never links [microsoft.com] to the wrong place [apple.com] again.
Or perhaps Microsoft [microsoft.com] just put some smart tag [microsoft.com] code [microsoft.com] in Slash [phpnuke.org].
Yes I know is is somewhat offtopic, but CmdrTaco did link to the wrong place with the LiViD link. www.livid.org goes to someguy's homepage while www.linuxvideo.orrg goes to LiViD. So this is ontopic. And it makes fun of Smart Tags.
--Volrath50
Ogle? (Score:2)
Re:Give Up? (Score:2)
Actually, DeCSS has NOTHING to do with pirating DVD's, that is the BIGGEST misconception that was allowed to become "fact" in Kaplan's Kangaroo Kourt.
DeCSS allows the DVD to be decrypted as in what a player does. True, it COULD be used to decrypt a DVD to allow it to be copied enencrypted, but I seriously doubt that is what most of the commercial "pirates" are doing (I hate that term, Does copying software or movies REALLY have the moral equivalency of hijacking a ship?).
DVD's could be copied before DeCSS, and without DeCSS by simply making a bit-for-bit copy of the disc. This fact is what has doomed copy protection schemes since they were first tried in the 1980's.
The ONLY practical application for DeCSS is to make a player. Which is what the MPAA cartel fears FAR more than "piracy". The DVD is a scheme that replaces the free, open VHS system with a "toll road" that only allows approved players, and restricts those they don't want from the market.
Re:Give Up? (Score:3)
"
Yep. A GPL'ed DVD player would undermine this cartel. Right now, not just ANYONE can make and sell a DVD player, as it is with VHS. Like Nintendo, (who has for years refused to make a CD-ROM based video game machine, solely because all the money they make off making software companies buy carts from them), they want to control who can enter their market, and WHAT they are "allowed" to do.
Re:MPAA, Same power outside of US? (Score:5)
Theoretically, NONE. However, this did not stop them from having the author of DeCSS arrested and his PC confiscated.
This is another case that would make them look horrible, if they go after authors CLEARLY just trying to make a player. Such a shot to one foot, along with the other shot the RIAA administered by threatening Felten, COULD finally destroy the DMCA.
Commercial DVD (Score:2)
Check out Intervideo [intervideo.com] for their Linux based player. They don't sell it to consumers, it is an integration package. Expect some distro's to start carrying it some time in the future.
Hacker Effort (Score:2)
If writing one without permission violates the DMCA, why won't someone (I dunno, Redhat has money now [slashdot.org]) just write a DVD player and pay the license fee. Free OS + Free Software + $30 DVD Player Software still makes for a pretty inexpensive package.
After all, it's DVD, so why settle for less than 100% faithful reproduction in playback?
Good to see... (Score:4)
See, SmartTags(tm) aren't so bad after all.
Re:Is it just me... (Score:2)
From intervideo's website...
br> Linux users should be aware that we are engaged with top computer, Internet appliance, and set-top box manufacturers to provide the highest qualilty DVD playback for their devices.
This sounds to me like someone scrambled to make confusion about a legitimate desktop dvd player for linux versus some complete product which is NOT my computer.
Re:Oh no! (Score:2)
Not necessary; that's covered automatically by the fact that they're using DeCSS (or some other CSS-decryption algorithm), which immediately makes them Evil Anti-Capitalist Thieving Pirates, just like those damn Napster users [modernhumorist.com]...
[this article is Smiley Captioned for the sarcasm-impaired]
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#/usr/bin/perl
require 6.0;
Spelling (Score:2)
Sorry, I'm bored at work.
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If there were gods, how could I bear to be no god?
Oh no! (Score:5)
MPAA, Same power outside of US? (Score:2)