//Markus
John Gilmore wrote:
I was at the Archive yesterday, talking with Tracey. They'd like to provide all their video and audio in formats that free software can use. They have huge transcoding engines that can convert it all. The problem is their player is Flash-based and just force-feeds the FLV file, whichdoesn't work in exclusively free software based systems.We need to design a *simple*, *fast*, and *backward compatible* way that a Flash movie can know what codecs are available to it in Gnash. Then they can feed their Flash movie a list of URLs and the corresponding codecs, and the flash movie can pick the best fit from the list. By *backward compatible* I mean that if you run the same Flash movie on Adobe Flash, it fails cleanly (the interface isn't there), so the movie can assume it should play an FLV file in that case. The interface can't involve forking a test movie, etc, etc, etc. It has to be *simple* and straightforward, or it simply won't happen.And if it doesn't happen, then people who desparately *want* to enable free software to use free codecs, WILL NOT BE ABLE TO.She'll be putting up some Ogg Theora transcodes soon, that we can test her flash movie player against, to see if it will just play an Ogg movie if told to do so. Building in the pick-a-url-based-on-a-codec stuff will take a bit longer (we'll have to define it first!). Thanks... John _______________________________________________ Gnash-dev mailing list Gnash-dev@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnash-dev
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