[opensuse] video question
OpenSUSE Tumbleweed up to date as per a day or two ago. I receive every so often, a video packed in a file from some organization--perhaps Popular Mechanics--which reads "No compatible source was found for this media. Refresh the page to resume playback." It is not possible to play the video. It is not possible to "refresh the page"--I wouldn't even know how, if it were, but no action can be taken in regard to this. The specific file from PopMech is called WATCH NEXT "This Glider Uses Water-Reactive Fuel to Launch" It is a subsidiary of this URL: https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/animals/g29331225/fat-bears-machines/?source=nl&utm_source=nl_pop&utm_medium=email&date=100219&utm_campaign=nl18142688&src=nl I probably need some kind of driver that I don't have. Can someone tell me what I need to run this video? Thanx! --doug -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Le 03/10/2019 à 01:42, Doug McGarrett a écrit :
Water-Reactive Fuel
this one? https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/robots/a29003643/glider-robot-ch... I have no problem to read the video. Do you have enabled the packman repo? jdd -- http://dodin.org -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Le 03/10/2019 à 07:51, jdd@dodin.org a écrit :
Le 03/10/2019 à 01:42, Doug McGarrett a écrit :
Water-Reactive Fuel
this one?
https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/robots/a29003643/glider-robot-ch...
I have no problem to read the video.
Do you have enabled the packman repo?
jdd
I could even dowload it with "downloadvideohelper" (firefox addon) it's a file called ".mt2p" "format MPEG-TS" says mediainfo jdd -- http://dodin.org -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
* jdd@dodin.org <jdd@dodin.org> [10-03-19 02:04]:
Le 03/10/2019 à 07:51, jdd@dodin.org a écrit :
Le 03/10/2019 à 01:42, Doug McGarrett a écrit :
Water-Reactive Fuel
this one?
https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/robots/a29003643/glider-robot-ch...
I have no problem to read the video.
Do you have enabled the packman repo?
jdd
I could even dowload it with "downloadvideohelper" (firefox addon)
it's a file called ".mt2p" "format MPEG-TS" says mediainfo
two python scripts that make this quite easy and handy: youtube-dl youtube-dl-gui -- (paka)Patrick Shanahan Plainfield, Indiana, USA @ptilopteri http://en.opensuse.org openSUSE Community Member facebook/ptilopteri Photos: http://wahoo.no-ip.org/piwigo paka @ IRCnet freenode -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Le 03/10/2019 à 14:12, Patrick Shanahan a écrit :
* jdd@dodin.org <jdd@dodin.org> [10-03-19 02:04]:
Le 03/10/2019 à 07:51, jdd@dodin.org a écrit :
Le 03/10/2019 à 01:42, Doug McGarrett a écrit :
Water-Reactive Fuel
this one?
https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/robots/a29003643/glider-robot-ch...
I have no problem to read the video.
Do you have enabled the packman repo?
jdd
I could even dowload it with "downloadvideohelper" (firefox addon)
it's a file called ".mt2p" "format MPEG-TS" says mediainfo
two python scripts that make this quite easy and handy: youtube-dl youtube-dl-gui
not so, the video url is pretty well naked. I had to use videodownloader jdd -- http://dodin.org -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 10/03/2019 01:51 AM, jdd@dodin.org wrote:
Le 03/10/2019 à 01:42, Doug McGarrett a écrit :
Water-Reactive Fuel
this one?
https://www.popularmechanics.com/technology/robots/a29003643/glider-robot-ch...
I have no problem to read the video.
Do you have enabled the packman repo?
jdd
I'm fairly new to OpenSUSE, but not to Linux. How do I enable the packman repo? When I do that, I will still need the complete name of the file, I assume. Thanx for your assistance! --doug -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 03/10/2019 20.04, Doug McGarrett wrote:
I'm fairly new to OpenSUSE, but not to Linux. How do I enable the packman repo? When I do that, I will still need the complete name of the file, I assume.
Start up YaST, then start the "software repositories" module. On it, click on the "add" button. Now, select "community repositories"., and "next" button. On the resulting list, you should see "Packman". Click on it, then Ok, exit saving changes. You could give it a priority of 95, which is higher priority than the default 99. Now on YaST start the "software management" module. Select the "repositories" tab. On that view, on the left panel you should see the packman entry. If not, abort and repeat the previous paragraph. Ince you see the list of packman entries, on top of the right hand panel you should see "Switch system packages to the versions on this repo". Click on it, and accept to exit an apply changes. It is possible that it gives a conflict list saying that this package is going to change vendor from oss to packman. Accept all of them, do change the vendor. It is easier to do than to describe, but I do not make videos. Notice that installing those packages might be illegal in some countries; some of the complications of the procedure are there so that "SUSE" is not involved: they don't provide the packages nor do they tell you to install them. Legal tricks. There is another equivalent procedure using zypper CLI commands. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from openSUSE 15.1 (Legolas))
On 10/03/2019 03:31 PM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 03/10/2019 20.04, Doug McGarrett wrote:
I'm fairly new to OpenSUSE, but not to Linux. How do I enable the packman repo? When I do that, I will still need the complete name of the file, I assume.
Start up YaST, then start the "software repositories" module. On it, click on the "add" button. Now, select "community repositories"., and "next" button. On the resulting list, you should see "Packman". Click on it, then Ok, exit saving changes. You could give it a priority of 95, which is higher priority than the default 99.
Now on YaST start the "software management" module. Select the "repositories" tab. On that view, on the left panel you should see the packman entry. If not, abort and repeat the previous paragraph. Ince you see the list of packman entries, on top of the right hand panel you should see "Switch system packages to the versions on this repo". Click on it, and accept to exit an apply changes.
It is possible that it gives a conflict list saying that this package is going to change vendor from oss to packman. Accept all of them, do change the vendor.
It is easier to do than to describe, but I do not make videos.
Notice that installing those packages might be illegal in some countries; some of the complications of the procedure are there so that "SUSE" is not involved: they don't provide the packages nor do they tell you to install them. Legal tricks.
There is another equivalent procedure using zypper CLI commands.
Thank you, Carlos! I believe that this worked. Your very detailed instructions are just what I needed to add the Packman stuff. --doug -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Am 04.10.19 um 02:52 schrieb Doug McGarrett:
Thank you, Carlos! I believe that this worked. Your very detailed instructions are just what I needed to add the Packman stuff.
Do only install from Packman or any other of the available repositories what you need to solve your problem, that way you may avoid conflicting versions of packages from different repositories for the same program. Peter -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 04/10/2019 13.45, Peter McD wrote:
Am 04.10.19 um 02:52 schrieb Doug McGarrett:
Thank you, Carlos! I believe that this worked. Your very detailed instructions are just what I needed to add the Packman stuff.
Do only install from Packman or any other of the available repositories what you need to solve your problem, that way you may avoid conflicting versions of packages from different repositories for the same program.
How, exactly? Selecting manually all the needed packman files is far from trivial, even if you have an idea which they are. Someone needs to create a list to feed zypper (which existed). <https://en.opensuse.org/Main_Page> search "multimedia" --> <https://en.opensuse.org/Concepts_multimedia#Multimedia_support> +++............. To add proprietary multimedia support in openSUSE, please refer to the following websites: Codecs openSUSE-Community.org .............++- --> <http://www.opensuse-community.org/> and use the "one click" Note the verification step: <http://www.opensuse-community.org/images/packman-vendorchange.png> which is exactly the instructions I gave. There is no list of what one should install. Yes, it is very possibly that doing the switch this recommended way might install things we do not want. Such is life. In those cases, you have to do multiple switches in precise order: 1st packman, then another repo. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 15.0 x86_64 at Telcontar)
Am 04.10.19 um 14:10 schrieb Carlos E. R.:
On 04/10/2019 13.45, Peter McD wrote:
Am 04.10.19 um 02:52 schrieb Doug McGarrett:
Thank you, Carlos! I believe that this worked. Your very detailed instructions are just what I needed to add the Packman stuff.
Do only install from Packman or any other of the available repositories what you need to solve your problem, that way you may avoid conflicting versions of packages from different repositories for the same program.
How, exactly?
Selecting manually all the needed packman files is far from trivial, even if you have an idea which they are. Someone needs to create a list to feed zypper (which existed).
This is not what I mean. I prefer leaving openSUSE as it is unless I need additional software. With the Packman repository and I assume with all community repos you can select changing all system packages to a repository you have added if they are available there, which may not be necessary for just the program you want from that repo. With a bit of googling/help from this list one can find the additional necessary packages for a specific program from packman. As you point out.
To add proprietary multimedia support in openSUSE, please refer to the following websites:
Codecs openSUSE-Community.org .............++-
--> <http://www.opensuse-community.org/> and use the "one click"
I don't like "one click"
Note the verification step: <http://www.opensuse-community.org/images/packman-vendorchange.png>
which is exactly the instructions I gave. There is no list of what one should install.
Not quite. Google: packman vlc codecs k3b. Don't forget, updates with Tumleweed are (check man zypper): zypper dup --no-allow-vendor-change otherwise packman packets may occasionally get replaced with system packets and vice versa. Peter -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 04/10/2019 16.31, Peter McD wrote:
Am 04.10.19 um 14:10 schrieb Carlos E. R.:
On 04/10/2019 13.45, Peter McD wrote:
Am 04.10.19 um 02:52 schrieb Doug McGarrett:
Thank you, Carlos! I believe that this worked. Your very detailed instructions are just what I needed to add the Packman stuff.
Do only install from Packman or any other of the available repositories what you need to solve your problem, that way you may avoid conflicting versions of packages from different repositories for the same program.
How, exactly?
Selecting manually all the needed packman files is far from trivial, even if you have an idea which they are. Someone needs to create a list to feed zypper (which existed).
This is not what I mean. I prefer leaving openSUSE as it is unless I need additional software.
With the Packman repository and I assume with all community repos you can select changing all system packages to a repository you have added if they are available there, which may not be necessary for just the program you want from that repo.
No, it is far easier than that and will not trigger additional (unneeded) packages per se. Suppose the only multimedia package installed is xine-ui. Well, you do the packman switch. xine-ui gets replaced, and hopefully you get libxine2 and libxine2-codecs from packman. That is all. which is the correct result no matter how you get there. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 15.0 x86_64 at Telcontar)
Le 04/10/2019 à 19:04, Carlos E.R. a écrit :
Well, you do the packman switch.
I also at first got worried by the packman switch, but I have since learned that packman is a non official repo you can trust as much as the officials one. Do not worry to make the jump from the beginning, this will save you much headaches jdd -- http://dodin.org -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 04/10/2019 19.43, jdd@dodin.org wrote:
Le 04/10/2019 à 19:04, Carlos E.R. a écrit :
Well, you do the packman switch.
I also at first got worried by the packman switch, but I have since learned that packman is a non official repo you can trust as much as the officials one. Do not worry to make the jump from the beginning, this will save you much headaches
Sometimes there are issues. For example, I install Lazarus (a free alternative to Delphi, let's say). Packman uses it because some of the packages they make are compiled with Lazarus, so sometimes they also distribute it. But, their version is not always the latest; sometimes it is in the pascal repo, or now it is in the Education repo (from memory). So if they do distribute it, I have to remember to make another switch to the pascal repo. Even so, making the switch is far easier than searching for the wanted packages one by one. -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 15.0 x86_64 at Telcontar)
On 10/04/2019 07:10 AM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
How, exactly?
Selecting manually all the needed packman files is far from trivial, even if you have an idea which they are. Someone needs to create a list to feed zypper (which existed).
<https://en.opensuse.org/Main_Page> search "multimedia" --> <https://en.opensuse.org/Concepts_multimedia#Multimedia_support>
+++............. To add proprietary multimedia support in openSUSE, please refer to the following websites:
Codecs openSUSE-Community.org .............++-
--> <http://www.opensuse-community.org/> and use the "one click"
Note the verification step: <http://www.opensuse-community.org/images/packman-vendorchange.png>
which is exactly the instructions I gave.
There is no list of what one should install.
Yes, it is very possibly that doing the switch this recommended way might install things we do not want. Such is life.
In those cases, you have to do multiple switches in precise order: 1st packman, then another repo.
I always found it simplest to add the packman repo and then as root from a terminal # zypper -v dup -d -r packman --allow-v confirm and you are done. -- David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E.
David C. Rankin wrote:
On 10/04/2019 07:10 AM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
How, exactly?
Selecting manually all the needed packman files is far from trivial, even if you have an idea which they are. Someone needs to create a list to feed zypper (which existed).
<https://en.opensuse.org/Main_Page> search "multimedia" --> <https://en.opensuse.org/Concepts_multimedia#Multimedia_support>
+++............. To add proprietary multimedia support in openSUSE, please refer to the following websites:
Codecs openSUSE-Community.org .............++-
--> <http://www.opensuse-community.org/> and use the "one click"
Note the verification step: <http://www.opensuse-community.org/images/packman-vendorchange.png>
which is exactly the instructions I gave.
There is no list of what one should install.
Yes, it is very possibly that doing the switch this recommended way might install things we do not want. Such is life.
In those cases, you have to do multiple switches in precise order: 1st packman, then another repo.
I always found it simplest to add the packman repo and then as root from a terminal
# zypper -v dup -d -r packman --allow-v
confirm and you are done.
I thought the previous instructions from Carlos installed the Packman repo. I ran the zypper -v dup -d -r packman -allow-v as shown, and got this: # zypper -v dup -d -r packman --allow-v Verbosity: 2 Initializing Target Repository 'packman' not found by its alias, number, or URI. Use 'zypper repos' to get the list of defined repositories. linux-4qnb:~ # zypper repos Repository priorities in effect: (See 'zypper lr -P' for details) 95 (raised priority) : 1 repository 99 (default priority) : 11 repositories Verbosity: 2 Initializing Target Repository 'packman' not found by its alias, number, or URI. Use 'zypper repos' to get the list of defined repositories. linux-4qnb:~ # zypper repos Repository priorities in effect: (See 'zypper lr -P' for details) 95 (raised priority) : 1 repository 99 (default priority) : 11 repositories # | Alias | Name | Enabled | GPG Check | Refresh ---+--------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------+-----------+-------- 1 | SoftMaker_Office_Repository | SoftMaker Office Repository | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes 2 | http-download.opensuse.org-0f4226f0 | home:awissu:NonFree | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes 3 | http-download.opensuse.org-36b1efab | home:liguros | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes 4 | http-download.opensuse.org-8fdb697a | openSUSE:Factory | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes 5 | http-download.opensuse.org-a34f094d | hamradio | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes 6 | http-download.opensuse.org-af160fe1 | home:Ledest:devel | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes 7 | http-download.opensuse.org-c40d3430 | KDE:Extra | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes 8 | http-download.opensuse.org-eadae586 | openSUSE:Tumbleweed | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes 9 | openSUSE-20190516-0 | openSUSE-20190516-0 | No | ---- | ---- 10 | packman.inode.at-openSUSE_Tumbleweed | Packman Repository | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes <<<<<<<----- 11 | repo-debug | openSUSE-Tumbleweed-Debug | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes 12 | repo-non-oss | openSUSE-Tumbleweed-Non-Oss | No | ---- | ---- 13 | repo-oss | openSUSE-Tumbleweed-Oss | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes 14 | repo-source | openSUSE-Tumbleweed-Source | No | ---- | ---- 15 | repo-update | openSUSE-Tumbleweed-Update | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes Doesn't that say that Packman repo is installed? coonfused--doug -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 10/04/2019 03:02 PM, Doug McGarrett wrote:
I thought the previous instructions from Carlos installed the Packman repo. I ran the zypper -v dup -d -r packman -allow-v as shown, and got this: # zypper -v dup -d -r packman --allow-v Verbosity: 2 Initializing Target Repository 'packman' not found by its alias, number, or URI. Use 'zypper repos' to get the list of defined repositories. linux-4qnb:~ # zypper repos Repository priorities in effect: (See 'zypper lr -P' for details) 95 (raised priority) : 1 repository 99 (default priority) : 11 repositories
You would need to use "Packman Repository", sorry, I always create a short-name for repos to avoid typing... -- David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 10/04/2019 04:57 PM, David C. Rankin wrote:
On 10/04/2019 03:02 PM, Doug McGarrett wrote:
I thought the previous instructions from Carlos installed the Packman repo. I ran the zypper -v dup -d -r packman -allow-v as shown, and got this: # zypper -v dup -d -r packman --allow-v Verbosity: 2 Initializing Target Repository 'packman' not found by its alias, number, or URI. Use 'zypper repos' to get the list of defined repositories. linux-4qnb:~ # zypper repos Repository priorities in effect: (See 'zypper lr -P' for details) 95 (raised priority) : 1 repository 99 (default priority) : 11 repositories
You would need to use "Packman Repository", sorry, I always create a short-name for repos to avoid typing...
And how would I do that? (I don't mind the typing, I just need to know what to do next!) And then what? Is there some video driver file I need to install? --doug -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 10/04/2019 05:40 PM, Doug McGarrett wrote:
On 10/04/2019 04:57 PM, David C. Rankin wrote:
On 10/04/2019 03:02 PM, Doug McGarrett wrote:
I thought the previous instructions from Carlos installed the Packman repo. I ran the zypper -v dup -d -r packman -allow-v as shown, and got this: # zypper -v dup -d -r packman --allow-v Verbosity: 2 Initializing Target Repository 'packman' not found by its alias, number, or URI. Use 'zypper repos' to get the list of defined repositories. linux-4qnb:~ # zypper repos Repository priorities in effect: (See 'zypper lr -P' for details) 95 (raised priority) : 1 repository 99 (default priority) : 11 repositories
You would need to use "Packman Repository", sorry, I always create a short-name for repos to avoid typing...
And how would I do that? (I don't mind the typing, I just need to know what to do next!) And then what? Is there some video driver file I need to install?
--doug
You see in your listing of repositories, the line: # | Alias | Name | Enabled | GPG Check | Refresh ---+--------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------+-----------+-------- <snip> 10 | packman.inode.at-openSUSE_Tumbleweed | Packman Repository | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes <<<<<<<----- The name of packman (the default name) is "Packman Repository". The alias is "packman.inode.at-openSUSE_Tumbleweed". You can use either. Personally, I would just change the alias using zypper nr, e.g. # zypper nr packman.inode.at-openSUSE_Tumbleweed packman Then just # zypper -v dup -d -r packman --allow-v confirm and you are done. -- David C. Rankin, J.D.,P.E. -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
Hello, On Fri, 04 Oct 2019, Doug McGarrett wrote:
On 10/04/2019 04:57 PM, David C. Rankin wrote:
On 10/04/2019 03:02 PM, Doug McGarrett wrote:
I thought the previous instructions from Carlos installed the Packman repo. I ran the zypper -v dup -d -r packman -allow-v as shown, and got this: # zypper -v dup -d -r packman --allow-v [..] You would need to use "Packman Repository", sorry, I always create a short-name for repos to avoid typing...
And how would I do that? (I don't mind the typing, I just need to know what to do next!)
You can simply edit the .repo file in /etc/zypp/repos.d/ which should be named something starting with 'packman'. It's a rather simple, ini-type textfile. The first line with brackets is the "Alias", and the line with 'name=' is the "full name" of the Repo... E.g.: ==== packman.repo ==== [packman] name=Packman enabled=1 [..] ==== You can edit both the '[ALIAS]' and the 'name=NAME' to your taste. Just remember to reflect the actual repo... Also, you can use comments starting with '#' at the start of a line.
And then what? Is there some video driver file I need to install?
I've not followed the thread *that* closely but I'd guess no. HTH, -dnh -- <[TN]FBMachine> i got kicked out of barnes and noble once for moving all the bibles into the fiction section -- http://www.bash.org/?406373 -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 04/10/2019 22.02, Doug McGarrett wrote:
David C. Rankin wrote:
On 10/04/2019 07:10 AM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
I always found it simplest to add the packman repo and then as root from a terminal
# zypper -v dup -d -r packman --allow-v
confirm and you are done.
I thought the previous instructions from Carlos installed the Packman repo. I ran the zypper -v dup -d -r packman -allow-v as shown, and got this: # zypper -v dup -d -r packman --allow-v Verbosity: 2 Initializing Target Repository 'packman' not found by its alias, number, or URI. Use 'zypper repos' to get the list of
Yes, but the actual name of "the packman repo" may be something else :-)
(See 'zypper lr -P' for details) 95 (raised priority) : 1 repository 99 (default priority) : 11 repositories
# | Alias | Name | Enabled | GPG Check | Refresh ---+--------------------------------------+-----------------------------+---------+-----------+--------
...
10 | packman.inode.at-openSUSE_Tumbleweed | Packman Repository | Yes | (r ) Yes | Yes <<<<<<<-----
That's the one. You can refer to it by number, alias, or name. You can edit both alias and name - preferably using the zypper command. Yes, also directly editing a definition file, but then you forget that there is a corresponding directory. ...
Doesn't that say that Packman repo is installed?
The wording is not "installed". Perhaps "defined or "activated". -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 15.0 x86_64 at Telcontar)
On 10/05/2019 06:58 AM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
On 04/10/2019 22.02, Doug McGarrett wrote:
David C. Rankin wrote:
On 10/04/2019 07:10 AM, Carlos E. R. wrote:
I always found it simplest to add the packman repo and then as root from a terminal
# zypper -v dup -d -r packman --allow-v
confirm and you are done.
I thought the previous instructions from Carlos installed the Packman repo. I ran the zypper -v dup -d -r packman -allow-v as shown, and got this: # zypper -v dup -d -r packman --allow-v Verbosity: 2 Initializing Target Repository 'packman' not found by its alias, number, or URI. Use 'zypper repos' to get the list of
Yes, but the actual name of "the packman repo" may be something else :-)
Yes, Looks like the actual name is slightly different. I can now run the video from Pop Mech. Thankx, everybody! --doug -- To unsubscribe, e-mail: opensuse+unsubscribe@opensuse.org To contact the owner, e-mail: opensuse+owner@opensuse.org
On 03/10/2019 01.42, Doug McGarrett wrote:
OpenSUSE Tumbleweed up to date as per a day or two ago.
I receive every so often, a video packed in a file from some organization--perhaps Popular Mechanics--which reads "No compatible source was found for this media. Refresh the page to resume playback."
It is not possible to play the video. It is not possible to "refresh the page"--I wouldn't even know how, if it were, but no action can be taken in regard to this.
The specific file from PopMech is called WATCH NEXT "This Glider Uses Water-Reactive Fuel to Launch" It is a subsidiary of this URL:
Plays fine here.
I probably need some kind of driver that I don't have. Can someone tell me what I need to run this video? Thanx!
Did you made the switch to packman repo? -- Cheers / Saludos, Carlos E. R. (from 15.0 x86_64 at Telcontar)
participants (8)
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Carlos E. R.
-
Carlos E.R.
-
David C. Rankin
-
David Haller
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Doug McGarrett
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jdd@dodin.org
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Patrick Shanahan
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Peter McD