For anyone looking for another option, I've had pretty good luck using xxmc.  So far it seems to give the best picture - virutally as good as my standalone DVD player.    Xvmc doesn't work at all, and xshm looks terrible on my setup.  Haven't tried opengl yet though...


On 12/13/05, Brad DerManouelian <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I am using PVR-350's tv out. I can play using the Xv driver, but it's
jumpy with some DVDs, so I switched to xshm and never thought much
more about it.

On Dec 13, 2005, at 9:01 PM, Michael T. Dean wrote:

> Mark J. Small wrote:
>
>> On December 13, 2005 08:31 am, Brad DerManouelian wrote:
>>
>>> These work for me. -V xshm got rid of my shaky playback. --no-splash
>>> and --no-logo do what they look like they do.
>>>
>>> DVD:
>>> xine -pfhq -V xshm --no-splash --no-logo dvd://%s
>>>
>>> Video:
>>> xine -pfhq -V xshm --no-splash --no-logo %s
>>>
>> Hmmm the xine docs claim that xshm is a lot slower than xv.  Does
>> real world experience say otherwize?
>> Personally I compiled my xine to use xvmc for more gforce mx
>> 4000.  I don't use xvmc for mythtv yet, but it works great with
>> xine.  My P3 733 plays DVD's beautifully that way.
>>
>>
> I would bet that Brad is using a PVR-350 for output and hasn't yet
> upgraded to/installed John Harvey's X driver with Xv support.
> Other than using a device driver without Xv support, I can't
> imagine any reason for using xshm.
>
> Mike
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>



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