I've been using FC5, and despite my best efforts for a few weeks cannot get it to play the major video formats (XviD etc).
The only thing keeping me from never using windows again, and forcing myself to really sink my teeth into linux is my inability to get videos to play.
Is there a distro that comes preloaded with things like Mplayer, (or anything with XviD and DivX support)?
apparently FC5 cant compile most programs without some pretty serious custumization, something to do with not supporting X11, or gcc 3.X. , which, curiously, i cant find anywhere for x86_64 systems
BTW; I'm a total nooblet, I might need to be spoken too like im a child if your giving any advice
I solved my own problem, ill post the solution so anyone can read it, and i can refer to this later if i need to
If you find your system doesnt want to compile the code :
goto
[/url]http://rpm.greysector.net/mplayer/ and find latest/ appropiate rpm
goto
[url=http://rpm.greysector.net/greysector-pubkey.txt]http://rpm.greysector.net/greysector-pubkey.txt and save the file
its easiest to put them both in same path
in console type
su-
(goto path of ...pubkey.txt)
rpm --import ...pubkey.txt
yum install mplayer-gui
or if you want onlywant command line version
yum install (mplayer package name)
there are a few libraries required for Mplayer, which i installed earlier, but i dont remember them all, they were all refered to in links less than 3 deep on the first few results in google with the search "mplayer"
Anyweb:
No, actually i did not see that, thanks for the great link, and thread though, now my solution looks kind of silly, but ill leave it anyway, i didnt see your post until after i posted.
thanks a million anyway anyweb, sorry to bother you again
good stuff
but dont forget that the
fedora core release 5 Extras howto, doesnt require you to compile anything, and covers more than just installing mplayer and its windows codecs, if i was you, i'd still check it out
in general, unless you have to, it's advisable not to compile on an RPM based distro,
the rpm's are out there, usually already made for you (from livna or freshrpms)
glad you got it fixed though
cheers
anyweb
Yes, that fedora core 5 extras thread is very nice work anyweb, i completed all of the actions described in it, and am now going back over it to better understand what exactly i just did.
I was under the impression that i was better off compiling most of my programs because I am running x86_64, and most of the rpms i see are for i386, which although they usually work, from my limited understanding, it seems like this could cause some problems, even if they dont manifest themselves immediatly.
am i mistaken? or does it not matter in the majority of cases?