Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
Predrag Punosevac wrote: Any video posted on Youtube will work for youtube-dl . It will snap the file in .flv format which can be player only with VLC and MPlayer. Nothing else. Clive is capable of snapping videos from Google video as well and has an additional capabilities to converting .flv files to more friendly video formats like .MPG So what do you think? That I can not watch YouTube because I use FreeBSD? Funny... But there has been an issue, a friend of mine reported to me. I do not know anything about this topic, but I wanted to post it here for convenience. I have been told that there are various adult tubes on the net, that require flash > 7. Since flash9 is obviously not working on freebsd (at list it wasn't one month ago) this friend of mine is not able to watch those adult tubes. Due to his reporting, also tools like unplug-xpi did not do the job (btw, does this tool EVER download a flv file??) Well, this of course does not affect me at all, but I wanted to forward the issue/feedback to the list. Of course I will forward the replies back... At last I can say, I am happy not having any interest in adult tubes and therefore not being affected by this topic... (And I told my friend, he should not be wine-ing about this topic... ^^) Greez, Tino ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
On Tue, Dec 11, 2007 at 02:41:08AM -0800, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote: > > > > -Original Message- > Hi Gary, > > You mentioned you wanted to record a 117 minute COMMERCIAL dvd. Now, > before I continue let me explain that doing so is illegal in the US. > All commercial DVD's are encrypted and the DMCA makes decrypting of > them illegal, it even makes it illegal to give someone a copy of > a program that will decrypt them, it makes it illegal to even write > and post online the source code to such a program. It is NOT illegal > to print up such source code in a paper book and sell it - the authors > of DMCA wanted to duck the 1st amendment - Google DeCSS for > an understanding of the controversy. I'll check it out when I have nothig better to do! I've given up on copying the one commercial DVD but still want to back up my Jos Campbell DVD. Before it gets scratched up. Or lost. > > With this in mind understand that CSS was broken years ago. Because > of this, the DVD producers figured out that copying wasn't much of > an obstacle to the unwashed masses, particulary when free programs > for Windows began to show up. > > Many people with children have found that they accumulate a large > number of Disney videos. They have also found the kids tend to scratch > the shit out of them. So there is a large interest in being able to > copy these things and store the masters safely away, then give the > kids the copy to destroy. So all copying of commercial DVD's is not > for piracy and I think people who assert this are moronic idiots. > Further, with Disney DVD's, Disney lately has taken to inserting > commercials for Disney cruise lines and other garbage into the DVD's > that are NOT skippable with a normal DVD player. Responsible parents > do not wish their kids to view this crap and so naturally there is > another reason to copy these - to remaster them to prune out these > commercials so the kids don't view them. Also illegal under the > law as the copyright holder hasn't given you permission to do this. It wasn't bad enough that Ol' Walt loved Uncle Adolf; but the corporate culture hasn't changed that much now, has it? > > Anyway, Disney is greedy and wishes people to continue to > buy replacement DVD's for ones they already own, and they want to push > their crappy and junky cruise lines. So they take a dim view of copying. > They know the CSS has been broken so these days they use all manner > of different copy protection. One system is to intentionally press > the DVD with some sectors using invalid CRC's thus a regular block ISO > copy program will hit these sectors and assume the DVD is bad and > abort. The menu on the DVD avoids these sectors, naturally. The > latest trick is to damage the filesystem on the DVD in > such a way as to make the DVD readable by a DVD player but not by > a computer DVD drive. Pirates of Carribean 3 has that one, for example. > There are many other copy protection tricks, it is a cat-and-mouse > game that entire websites are devoted to following. Interestingly, > since so many of these schemes utterly violate the DVD standards, > companies like Disney are not allowed to use the official DVD logos > on the boxes that they package their DVD's on. That is why Disney > for example has their own logo - Disney DVD - which is meaningless > under the standard. this i hadn't heaard, but it doesn't surprise me. > > So far, of the HD formats, HD-DVD encryption has also been cracked > and Blue Ray has not. That is why this Christmas Disney is pushing > Blue Ray and isn't making their movie titles available in HD-DVD. > > Anyway, the fact is that none of the open source DVD copying > programs can really deal with these advanced systems. They can > deal with CSS but that's it. If your plan is to copy commercial > DVD's for your own use, you should be aware of all this. Right > now, the most advanced DVD cracking programs that will deal with > ALL of the perverted copy protection schemes in use are only available > as commercial programs for Windows. (Some trialware, some not) > And none are available over-the-counter in the US, you have to > download them from foreign websites. > Well, if it takes messing with Dos: no thanks. for as little as I watch any video, if I can't tape it off PBS, then I'll buy whatever DVDs there are. Just a shame that I can't make a backup. Oh-well. Compared to all the rest of the BS and global problems, *this* issue isn't even a hill of beans. gary > Ted > No virus found in this outgoing message. > Checked by AVG Free Edition. > Version: 7.5.503 / Virus Database: 269.17.0/1180 - Release Date: 12/10/2007 > 2:51 PM > -- Gary Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.thought.org Public Service Unix http://jottings.thought.org http://transfinite.thought.org ___
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
Predrag Punosevac wrote: Any video posted on Youtube will work for youtube-dl . It will snap the file in .flv format which can be player only with VLC and MPlayer. Nothing else. Clive is capable of snapping videos from Google video as well and has an additional capabilities to converting .flv files to more friendly video formats like .MPG So what do you think? That I can not watch YouTube because I use FreeBSD? Funny... /me laughs But seriously yes I have to confess that in certain respects I do have that expectation of FreeBSD. It's not about what it can do it's about what people want to make it do. If I don't have ability/time/impetus to make it do something I accept it and I am very grateful for the solutions posted here. Sorry, really OT. Chris ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
On Tue, Dec 11, 2007 at 02:41:08AM -0800, Ted Mittelstaedt wrote: > ... > > > > But how are you getting your source? What definition is it in? > > > > The back of the disc says: "Aprox 117 minutes"; so evidently it was > > mastered in SP.If there are *32* defs, man, I miht as well throw in > > the towel and go back to my Shostakovich. (Unless these definitions are > > largely air (== "PR stuff, aka hype). > > > > Hi Gary, > > You mentioned you wanted to record a 117 minute COMMERCIAL dvd. Now, > before I continue let me explain that doing so is illegal in the US. > All commercial DVD's are encrypted and the DMCA makes decrypting of > them illegal, it even makes it illegal to give someone a copy of > a program that will decrypt them, it makes it illegal to even write > and post online the source code to such a program. It is NOT illegal > to print up such source code in a paper book and sell it - the authors > of DMCA wanted to duck the 1st amendment - Google DeCSS for > an understanding of the controversy. > > With this in mind understand that CSS was broken years ago. Because > of this, the DVD producers figured out that copying wasn't much of > an obstacle to the unwashed masses, particulary when free programs > for Windows began to show up. > > Many people with children have found that they accumulate a large > number of Disney videos. They have also found the kids tend to scratch > the shit out of them. So there is a large interest in being able to > copy these things and store the masters safely away, then give the > kids the copy to destroy. So all copying of commercial DVD's is not > for piracy and I think people who assert this are moronic idiots. You are so right. Any backyard/foreign, etc software pirates have no problem defeating the copy protections and merrily go their way making thousands of pirate copies while ordinary folk out there who are copying for personal, home use, such as backup (legal by the way) are the only ones hampered by these junky, anti consumer, schemes. jerry > Further, with Disney DVD's, Disney lately has taken to inserting > commercials for Disney cruise lines and other garbage into the DVD's > that are NOT skippable with a normal DVD player. Responsible parents > do not wish their kids to view this crap and so naturally there is > another reason to copy these - to remaster them to prune out these > commercials so the kids don't view them. Also illegal under the > law as the copyright holder hasn't given you permission to do this. > > ... > > Anyway, the fact is that none of the open source DVD copying > programs can really deal with these advanced systems. They can > deal with CSS but that's it. If your plan is to copy commercial > DVD's for your own use, you should be aware of all this. Right > now, the most advanced DVD cracking programs that will deal with > ALL of the perverted copy protection schemes in use are only available > as commercial programs for Windows. (Some trialware, some not) > And none are available over-the-counter in the US, you have to > download them from foreign websites. > > Ted > No virus found in this outgoing message. > Checked by AVG Free Edition. > Version: 7.5.503 / Virus Database: 269.17.0/1180 - Release Date: 12/10/2007 > 2:51 PM > > ___ > freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
RE: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
> -Original Message- > From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of Gary Kline > Sent: Sunday, December 09, 2007 2:11 AM > To: Malcolm Kay > Cc: Gary Kline; freebsd-questions@freebsd.org > Subject: Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT. > > > On Sun, Dec 09, 2007 at 01:56:55PM +1030, Malcolm Kay wrote: > > On Sun, 9 Dec 2007 07:33 am, Gary Kline wrote: > > > > > > Folks, > > > > > > IFF k3b works, and I think it might, I'll put up a howto > > > on my bsd virtual site. Make this domain more useful. > > > The help from this group has been outstanding, but getting things > > > CD and DVD actually working has been a study in persseverancce. > > > > > I don't use k3b so what capability it has is not known to me. > > So far I've only used it to burn CD's; beyond that ... . > > > > > That said, first,if there is a website for total dweebs, please > > > post it; or send it privately. I just bought some "Memorex > > > DVD+RW" ; I want to record a 117 minute commercial DVD. > > > On the back on the DVDs is says these are only good for 60 minutes > > > in great qualty; it is good up to 120 minutes, and so on. > > > > The nominal capacity of the single sided DVD is 120 minutes but some 32 > > different definitions are recognised including: > > EP -- extended play - 360 minutes > > LP -- long play - 240 minutes > > SP -- standard play - 120 minutes > > FINE - 60 minutes > > But how are you getting your source? What definition is it in? > > The back of the disc says: "Aprox 117 minutes"; so evidently it was > mastered in SP.If there are *32* defs, man, I miht as well throw in > the towel and go back to my Shostakovich. (Unless these definitions are > largely air (== "PR stuff, aka hype). > Hi Gary, You mentioned you wanted to record a 117 minute COMMERCIAL dvd. Now, before I continue let me explain that doing so is illegal in the US. All commercial DVD's are encrypted and the DMCA makes decrypting of them illegal, it even makes it illegal to give someone a copy of a program that will decrypt them, it makes it illegal to even write and post online the source code to such a program. It is NOT illegal to print up such source code in a paper book and sell it - the authors of DMCA wanted to duck the 1st amendment - Google DeCSS for an understanding of the controversy. With this in mind understand that CSS was broken years ago. Because of this, the DVD producers figured out that copying wasn't much of an obstacle to the unwashed masses, particulary when free programs for Windows began to show up. Many people with children have found that they accumulate a large number of Disney videos. They have also found the kids tend to scratch the shit out of them. So there is a large interest in being able to copy these things and store the masters safely away, then give the kids the copy to destroy. So all copying of commercial DVD's is not for piracy and I think people who assert this are moronic idiots. Further, with Disney DVD's, Disney lately has taken to inserting commercials for Disney cruise lines and other garbage into the DVD's that are NOT skippable with a normal DVD player. Responsible parents do not wish their kids to view this crap and so naturally there is another reason to copy these - to remaster them to prune out these commercials so the kids don't view them. Also illegal under the law as the copyright holder hasn't given you permission to do this. Anyway, Disney is greedy and wishes people to continue to buy replacement DVD's for ones they already own, and they want to push their crappy and junky cruise lines. So they take a dim view of copying. They know the CSS has been broken so these days they use all manner of different copy protection. One system is to intentionally press the DVD with some sectors using invalid CRC's thus a regular block ISO copy program will hit these sectors and assume the DVD is bad and abort. The menu on the DVD avoids these sectors, naturally. The latest trick is to damage the filesystem on the DVD in such a way as to make the DVD readable by a DVD player but not by a computer DVD drive. Pirates of Carribean 3 has that one, for example. There are many other copy protection tricks, it is a cat-and-mouse game that entire websites are devoted to following. Interestingly, since so many of these schemes utterly violate the DVD standards, companies like Disney are not allowed to use the official DVD logos on the boxes that they package their DVD's on. That is why Disney for example has their own logo - Disney DVD - which is meaningless under the standard. So far, of the
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT. youtube-dl
Chris said: > > >I tried youtube-dl but every url I tried gave > >youtube-dl: No match. > >eg > >%youtube-dl http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA > >youtube-dl: No match. You have to quote the URL: huff@> youtube-dl "http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA"; The shell parses "http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA";, sees the '?', thinks it's a shell glob character, and does the usual thing. Which turns out to not be the Right Thing. Robert Huff ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT. youtube-dl
Chris said: I tried youtube-dl but every url I tried gave youtube-dl: No match. eg %youtube-dl http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA youtube-dl: No match. I'm sure someone else is going to jump in saying to qoute the URL, but and even easier way is to grab the string after watch?v= in your example : [23:29:22] [EMAIL PROTECTED] <104> [0] ~>youtube-dl gpIM3nBR2ZA Retrieving video webpage... done. Extracting URL "t" parameter... done. Requesting video file... done.Video data found at http://chi-v274.chi.youtube.com/get_video?video_id=gpIM3nBR2ZA Retrieving video data: 7.8% ( 1.59M of 20.41M) at 159.43k/s ETA 02:00 It's a little be easier, IMHO. -- If you can't beat your computer at chess, try kickboxing. --- --- --- Solving Today's Problems Tomorrow ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
On Monday 10 December 2007, RW wrote: > Probably Kubuntu was using Kmplayer with the Xine > backend. Xine has DVD menu support and AFAIK MPlayer > doesn't on any platform. I would normally use Xine for > DVDs and most video files as its picture quality is > better. That said, if you want to play DVDs through > mplayer you can navigate via the gmplayer context menu - > you don't need to play the vob files directly. No, I was using Kaffeine which also uses the xine backend (and its better picture quality). I see my original post ended up looking like just a moan when that wasn't my intention. (best laid plans...) I chose Kubuntu because it has an easy set up for VMware and a couple of similar products which I hope to get installed and set up to run BSD. Like I said I really like many things about FreeBSD, like it is just so much better organised than the Linux I've previously used. I just wanted to get 'my' basic requirements established first which has usually been trivial to achieve, but unfortunately got no further. neal. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
On Mon, 10 Dec 2007 01:09:40 +0100 Roland Smith <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Sun, Dec 09, 2007 at 11:57:18PM +, Chris Whitehouse wrote: > > I tried youtube-dl but every url I tried gave > > youtube-dl: No match. > > > > eg > > > > %youtube-dl http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA > > youtube-dl: No match. > > You have to quote the argument to youtube-dl, otherwise the shell will > mess it up, because '?' is a special character for the shell. > > So use: youtube-dl 'http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA' An alternative is the "All-In-One Video Bookmarklet" which you can get here: http://1024k.de/bookmarklets/video-bookmarklets.html It's just a little bit of javascript that's small enough to live in a bookmark. It turns the current page into a list of download links. I find it a lot easier than youtube-dl. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
On Sun, 9 Dec 2007 14:45:22 + neal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I have had unsolvable (so far) problems with playing both > dvd movies and cd audio. MPlayer will play VOBs but no > menus, no navigation which can make watching pretty much > impossible sometimes. > > I had actually given up on trying to get these two features > to work and have installed a new linux (to me), Kubuntu. Probably Kubuntu was using Kmplayer with the Xine backend. Xine has DVD menu support and AFAIK MPlayer doesn't on any platform. I would normally use Xine for DVDs and most video files as its picture quality is better. That said, if you want to play DVDs through mplayer you can navigate via the gmplayer context menu - you don't need to play the vob files directly. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
Chris Whitehouse wrote: Predrag Punosevac wrote: My Dear Friend, You will have to wait for a very long time then since all of the above except Flash (which Adobe does release for Linux but not for FreeBSD) works flawlessly on FreeBSD including watching YouTube (just use youtube-dl to snap the video and play with VLC). There are even alternative solutions for the Flash unless you want to play video games full of Flash! I tried youtube-dl but every url I tried gave youtube-dl: No match. eg %youtube-dl http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA youtube-dl: No match. I even installed the latest version. Do only certain videos work? Do you have an example that works? Any video posted on Youtube will work for youtube-dl . It will snap the file in .flv format which can be player only with VLC and MPlayer. Nothing else. Clive is capable of snapping videos from Google video as well and has an additional capabilities to converting .flv files to more friendly video formats like .MPG So what do you think? That I can not watch YouTube because I use FreeBSD? Funny... There are at least 4 other way to watch videos on YouTube on FreeBSD running machine. The one I proposed is the simplest. Thanks and apologies for hijacking your thread. Chris ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
Erik Trulsson wrote: On Sun, Dec 09, 2007 at 11:57:18PM +, Chris Whitehouse wrote: Predrag Punosevac wrote: My Dear Friend, You will have to wait for a very long time then since all of the above except Flash (which Adobe does release for Linux but not for FreeBSD) works flawlessly on FreeBSD including watching YouTube (just use youtube-dl to snap the video and play with VLC). There are even alternative solutions for the Flash unless you want to play video games full of Flash! I tried youtube-dl but every url I tried gave youtube-dl: No match. eg %youtube-dl http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA youtube-dl: No match. To get that example to work try: youtube-dl 'http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA' instead. The quote marks are important, because otherwise the shell will try to interpret the "?" in the URL as a wildcard and try to do wildcard expansion as if it was a filename. It is the shell (not youtube-dl) which gives the error message, when it cannot find any file that matches. This is nothing specific to youtube-dl. It is just the way most shells under Unix work. If you do not want the shell to try to interpret any 'funny' characters in an argument to the command you need to enclose the argument in quote marks. Yes that works, thanks everyone Chris ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
On Sun, Dec 09, 2007 at 11:57:18PM +, Chris Whitehouse wrote: > Predrag Punosevac wrote: > >> My Dear Friend, >> You will have to wait for a very long time then since all of the above >> except Flash (which Adobe does release for Linux but not for FreeBSD) >> works flawlessly on FreeBSD including watching YouTube (just use >> youtube-dl to snap the video and play with VLC). There are even >> alternative solutions for the Flash unless you want to play video games >> full of Flash! > > I tried youtube-dl but every url I tried gave > youtube-dl: No match. > > eg > > %youtube-dl http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA > youtube-dl: No match. To get that example to work try: youtube-dl 'http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA' instead. The quote marks are important, because otherwise the shell will try to interpret the "?" in the URL as a wildcard and try to do wildcard expansion as if it was a filename. It is the shell (not youtube-dl) which gives the error message, when it cannot find any file that matches. This is nothing specific to youtube-dl. It is just the way most shells under Unix work. If you do not want the shell to try to interpret any 'funny' characters in an argument to the command you need to enclose the argument in quote marks. > > I even installed the latest version. > > Do only certain videos work? Do you have an example that works? > > Thanks and apologies for hijacking your thread. > -- Erik Trulsson [EMAIL PROTECTED] ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
Chris Whitehouse wrote: Predrag Punosevac wrote: My Dear Friend, You will have to wait for a very long time then since all of the above except Flash (which Adobe does release for Linux but not for FreeBSD) works flawlessly on FreeBSD including watching YouTube (just use youtube-dl to snap the video and play with VLC). There are even alternative solutions for the Flash unless you want to play video games full of Flash! I tried youtube-dl but every url I tried gave youtube-dl: No match. eg %youtube-dl http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA youtube-dl: No match. I even installed the latest version. Do only certain videos work? Do you have an example that works? Thanks and apologies for hijacking your thread. Chris ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" %youtube-dl "http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA"; Retrieving video webpage... done. needs quotes... Chris ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
On Sun, Dec 09, 2007 at 11:57:18PM +, Chris Whitehouse wrote: > I tried youtube-dl but every url I tried gave > youtube-dl: No match. > > eg > > %youtube-dl http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA > youtube-dl: No match. You have to quote the argument to youtube-dl, otherwise the shell will mess it up, because '?' is a special character for the shell. So use: youtube-dl 'http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA' Tested and works fine here. Roland -- R.F.Smith http://www.xs4all.nl/~rsmith/ [plain text _non-HTML_ PGP/GnuPG encrypted/signed email much appreciated] pgp: 1A2B 477F 9970 BA3C 2914 B7CE 1277 EFB0 C321 A725 (KeyID: C321A725) pgp38Cmlqx9bh.pgp Description: PGP signature
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
Predrag Punosevac wrote: My Dear Friend, You will have to wait for a very long time then since all of the above except Flash (which Adobe does release for Linux but not for FreeBSD) works flawlessly on FreeBSD including watching YouTube (just use youtube-dl to snap the video and play with VLC). There are even alternative solutions for the Flash unless you want to play video games full of Flash! I tried youtube-dl but every url I tried gave youtube-dl: No match. eg %youtube-dl http://youtube.com/watch?v=gpIM3nBR2ZA youtube-dl: No match. I even installed the latest version. Do only certain videos work? Do you have an example that works? Thanks and apologies for hijacking your thread. Chris ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
neal wrote: On Saturday 08 December 2007, Predrag Punosevac wrote: I wrote K3b how to http://www.bsd-srbija.org/dokumentacija/doku.php/rezanje_ cd_i_dvd_diskova_pomo%C4%87u_k3b but you will need little bit of Serbian language to read it. Actually probably you could follow article even if you do not speak Serbian as the language is generic and there are only three important steps you need to do. Step 1 Editing your /boot/loader.conf file with atapicam_load="YES" hw.ata.ata_dma="1" hw.ata.atapi_dma="1" since FreeBSD is using atapicam device to write DVD Step 2 Edit your /etc/devfs.conf with various permission. Most of those are needed for a work station anyway perm /dev/acd0 0666 perm /dev/cd00666 # Commonly used by many ports link cd0 cdrom link cd0 dvd link cd0 rdvd link acd0 cdrom link acd0 dvd link acd0 rdvd # Misc other devices permcdrom 0666 permdvd 0666 permrdvd0666 permxpt00666 permpass0 0666 Step 3 Edit your /etc/fstab file if you want to use K3b as a normal user since the disk has to be mounted on the mount point which belong to you [pedja@ /usr/home/Pedja]$ more /etc/fstab #These are my options /dev/cd0 /usr/home/Pedja/mnt/cdrom cd9660 rw, noauto 0 0 /dev/acd0 /usr/home/Pedja/mnt/cdrom cd9660 rw, noauto 0 0 You do not need HAL for things to work but is not going to heart. Also read make showinfo /usr/ports/sysutils/k3b Best, Predrag Thanks for posting this Predrag. I have had unsolvable (so far) problems with playing both dvd movies and cd audio. MPlayer will play VOBs but no menus, no navigation which can make watching pretty much impossible sometimes. I had actually given up on trying to get these two features to work and have installed a new linux (to me), Kubuntu. On this platform, there are no problems with DVD movies, audio cd, streamed audio, even flash. I can watch youtube too. This has not been the case on FreeBSD. I have tried installing FreeBSD 6.2 via three different versions, FreeBSD, DesktopBSD and PCBSD, and asked questions on their mailing lists. My Dear Friend, You will have to wait for a very long time then since all of the above except Flash (which Adobe does release for Linux but not for FreeBSD) works flawlessly on FreeBSD including watching YouTube (just use youtube-dl to snap the video and play with VLC). There are even alternative solutions for the Flash unless you want to play video games full of Flash! The only reason they didn't work for you is that you didn't know how to set up those features. Never the less if you fell more comfortably with Kubuntu stick with it. FreeBSD is not platform for everything and everyone. Personally, I find myself using more and more OpenBSD. So you have to use OS you are comfortable with and has a features you most desire (in my case enhanced security). Best, Predrag But I do like many things about BSD and would like to be able to move to it completely when I can have these features working correctly, so I will try your suggestions above and see what happens. neal. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
neal schrieb: I have had unsolvable (so far) problems with playing both dvd movies and cd audio. MPlayer will play VOBs but no menus, no navigation which can make watching pretty much impossible sometimes. I had actually given up on trying to get these two features to work and have installed a new linux (to me), Kubuntu. On this platform, there are no problems with DVD movies, audio cd, streamed audio, even flash. I can watch youtube too. This has not been the case on FreeBSD. I have tried installing FreeBSD 6.2 via three different versions, FreeBSD, DesktopBSD and PCBSD, and asked questions on their mailing lists. Try to install www/linux-opera, audio/vlc for DVDs and www/linux-flashplugin7 for flash. That should give you ability to watch DVD and flash... (works for me...) Greez, Tino ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
On Saturday 08 December 2007, Predrag Punosevac wrote: > I wrote K3b how to > http://www.bsd-srbija.org/dokumentacija/doku.php/rezanje_ >cd_i_dvd_diskova_pomo%C4%87u_k3b but you will need little > bit of Serbian language to read it. > > Actually probably you could follow article even if you do > not speak Serbian as the language is generic and there > are only three important steps you need to do. > > Step 1 Editing your /boot/loader.conf file with > > atapicam_load="YES" > hw.ata.ata_dma="1" > hw.ata.atapi_dma="1" > > since FreeBSD is using atapicam device to write DVD > > > Step 2 Edit your /etc/devfs.conf with various permission. > Most of those are needed for a work station anyway > > perm /dev/acd0 0666 > perm /dev/cd0 0666 > > # Commonly used by many ports > > link cd0 cdrom > link cd0 dvd > link cd0 rdvd > > link acd0 cdrom > link acd0 dvd > link acd0 rdvd > > # Misc other devices > > perm cdrom 0666 > perm dvd 0666 > perm rdvd 0666 > perm xpt0 0666 > perm pass0 0666 > > > Step 3 Edit your /etc/fstab file if you want to use K3b > as a normal user since the disk has to be mounted on the > mount point which belong to you > > > [pedja@ /usr/home/Pedja]$ more /etc/fstab > #These are my options > /dev/cd0 /usr/home/Pedja/mnt/cdrom cd9660 rw, > noauto 0 0 /dev/acd0 > /usr/home/Pedja/mnt/cdrom cd9660 rw, noauto 0 > 0 > > > > You do not need HAL for things to work but is not going > to heart. > > > Also read > > make showinfo /usr/ports/sysutils/k3b > > Best, > Predrag Thanks for posting this Predrag. I have had unsolvable (so far) problems with playing both dvd movies and cd audio. MPlayer will play VOBs but no menus, no navigation which can make watching pretty much impossible sometimes. I had actually given up on trying to get these two features to work and have installed a new linux (to me), Kubuntu. On this platform, there are no problems with DVD movies, audio cd, streamed audio, even flash. I can watch youtube too. This has not been the case on FreeBSD. I have tried installing FreeBSD 6.2 via three different versions, FreeBSD, DesktopBSD and PCBSD, and asked questions on their mailing lists. But I do like many things about BSD and would like to be able to move to it completely when I can have these features working correctly, so I will try your suggestions above and see what happens. neal. ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
On Sun, Dec 09, 2007 at 01:56:55PM +1030, Malcolm Kay wrote: > On Sun, 9 Dec 2007 07:33 am, Gary Kline wrote: > > > > Folks, > > > > IFF k3b works, and I think it might, I'll put up a howto > > on my bsd virtual site. Make this domain more useful. > > The help from this group has been outstanding, but getting things > > CD and DVD actually working has been a study in persseverancce. > > > I don't use k3b so what capability it has is not known to me. So far I've only used it to burn CD's; beyond that ... . > > > That said, first,if there is a website for total dweebs, please > > post it; or send it privately. I just bought some "Memorex > > DVD+RW" ; I want to record a 117 minute commercial DVD. > > On the back on the DVDs is says these are only good for 60 minutes > > in great qualty; it is good up to 120 minutes, and so on. > > The nominal capacity of the single sided DVD is 120 minutes but some 32 > different definitions are recognised including: > EP -- extended play - 360 minutes > LP -- long play - 240 minutes > SP -- standard play - 120 minutes > FINE - 60 minutes > But how are you getting your source? What definition is it in? The back of the disc says: "Aprox 117 minutes"; so evidently it was mastered in SP.If there are *32* defs, man, I miht as well throw in the towel and go back to my Shostakovich. (Unless these definitions are largely air (== "PR stuff, aka hype). > > > Nutshell: how good will k3b and my Pioneer burner do on dubbing > > this professioally recorded disc? > > As I've already said I know little of k3b but you'll probably need some sort > of authoring/editing software and possibly another package for > compression/definition > conversion. > > > Also, Does thw "RW" mean tthat > > I can re-tape over this with another edu DVD? > > Yes, it means that the total disk can be rewritten -- but the ability to > edit without rewriting all can be quite limited. And RW disks can have a > rather limited rewrite life -- some 10s of times. Thanks for your datapoints. The URL that Predrag posted ought to give more pointers. gary > > > > gary > > > > PS: I much prefer analogue cassettes; I've been taping stuff > > since I taped "American Bandstand" off the TV :-) > > EP or LP modes with 6 or 4 hour capacity would probably both cater for a > better quality than your analogue cassettes. > > > > > > > > > > > Malcolm -- Gary Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.thought.org Public Service Unix http://jottings.thought.org http://transfinite.thought.org ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
On Sat, Dec 08, 2007 at 11:59:22PM +0100, Michel Talon wrote: > Gary Kline wrote: > > > IFF k3b works, and I think it might, I'll put up a howto > > on my bsd virtual site. > > K3b certainly works to burn CDs and DVDs under FreeBSD. I have used > it many times on several burners. Of course you need to kldload > atapicam for that. What does not work on any of my burners is burncd. I've only burned CDs on my Ubuntu platform. Are your necessay binaries chmod'd suid? that I missed until Saturday afternoon. > By the way if you want to copy 8 Gigs DVD on 4 Gigs DVD, i can recommend > you k9copy, which is fantastic. Does as well as dvdshrink, and very > fast. > If these are ports, I'll build them, thanks much, gary PS: To the list: is there any "extended play" alogrithm that has the least loss? > -- > > Michel TALON > > ___ > freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list > http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions > To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" -- Gary Kline [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.thought.org Public Service Unix http://jottings.thought.org http://transfinite.thought.org ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
On Sat, Dec 08, 2007 at 07:46:40PM -0700, Predrag Punosevac wrote: > Gary Kline wrote: > >On Sat, Dec 08, 2007 at 02:18:25PM -0700, Predrag Punosevac wrote: > > > >>Gary Kline wrote: > >> > >>> Folks, > >>> > >>> IFF k3b works, and I think it might, I'll put up a howto > >>> on my bsd virtual site. Make this domain more useful. > >>> The help from this group has been outstanding, but getting things > >>> CD and DVD actually working has been a study in persseverancce. > >>> > >>> That said, first,if there is a website for total dweebs, please > >>> post it; or send it privately. I just bought some "Memorex > >>> DVD+RW" ; I want to record a 117 minute commercial DVD. > >>> On the back on the DVDs is says these are only good for 60 minutes > >>> in great qualty; it is good up to 120 minutes, and so on. > >>> Nutshell: how good will k3b and my Pioneer burner do on dubbing > >>> this professioally recorded disc? Also, Does thw "RW" mean tthat > >>> I can re-tape over this with another edu DVD? > >>> > >>> gary > >>> > >>> PS: I much prefer analogue cassettes; I've been taping stuff > >>>since I taped "American Bandstand" off the TV :-) > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>I wrote K3b how to > >>http://www.bsd-srbija.org/dokumentacija/doku.php/rezanje_cd_i_dvd_diskova_pomo%C4%87u_k3b > >>but you will need little bit of Serbian language to read it. > >> > > > > > > Actually, my best friend for > 30 years comes from [ what was ] > > Yugoslavia; so he could surely help me with the translation. > > > > I think I have the k3b stuff actually workinng. As of late FFriday > > night, k3b ran thru all of its tests.That wasn't my question. > > I want to know > > more about what DVD blanks are good,better,best, and whether it is > > worth "wasting" a blank DVD in trying to copy a DVD that I borrowed > > from the library. > > > > I've googled arouund, tryiiing to get some kind of specs that an > > EE can understand ... even if he kknows nothing about figital > > video. > > > > > I think that duplicating DVDs works like a charm on FreeBSD but I think > there is a better software in ports for that of K3b which is > kind a all in one generic GUI application. This is also a useful link > http://www.dvddemystified.com/dvdfaq.html if you are trying to > understand DVD business. There are definitely people on this mailing > list or on OpenBSD mailing list (I do not remember any more as I am on > both mailing lists) who have fantastic knowledge of DVD writable medias, > proprietary Video Formats and various issues that come with that including > the issues of regional coding and by that I do not mean just USA vs > Europe or Asia. Even inside of U. S. where I have being g living for the > past 12 years there are many different regional formats. I am clueless > about it. > Hm. There is a new protocol, DVD-ROM (or perhaps it was DVD-CDROM); so if there are even *more*, I'd be spinning my wheel s, trying to figure this stuff out in any depth. > As a mathematician I am probably much less capable of understanding DVD > technical issues than you. > Isn't it more a matter of personal interest and time? I love math --and several other fields as well--but given the limitations we all have, learning sufficiently well (not to mention keeping-current:-), should give everyone pause. --Then there is the matter of living Life, and blah-blah-blah. Re the DVD stuff, I'd be happy to know some of the boundary conditions. And more practice and testing than theory. > To be perfectly honest as a professional mathematician I am very > concern with the status of TeX port and the fact that two years after > teTeX was abolished by TeX community in favor of TeXLive there are no > even indication that the TeXLive will be ported to FreeBSD. Even in the > most crude form (4 packages) as it is done in OpenBSD would be better > than noting. Of course the Debian way (30 or so packages) would be my > preferable way as TeXLive is developing really rapidly in some areas. > My knowledge of porting is unfortunately inadequate to be able to help > with such a major project. > teTeX is dead? After I met Don Knuth I really got into his stuff. But then, as mentioned above, LIFE hit me over the head, &c. FWIW, Someone friom the OOo list posted a math site a couple days ago. The site deals with some of the things that may interest you. I'll find it--this one I moused and clicked nd snagged. Or then again, if DEbian has the new TeX packages, our FBSD Linux support would do. ... . ciao, gary > > Cheers, > Predrag > > > > > > > > thanks for your email; it was one of the postings that helped me > > get atapicam stuff *working* > > > >
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
On Sat, 08 Dec 2007 14:18:25 -0700 Predrag Punosevac <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Gary Kline wrote: > >Folks, > > > >IFF k3b works, and I think it might, I'll put up a howto > >on my bsd virtual site. Make this domain more useful. > >The help from this group has been outstanding, but getting things > >CD and DVD actually working has been a study in persseverancce. [..] > I wrote K3b how to > http://www.bsd-srbija.org/dokumentacija/doku.php/rezanje_cd_i_dvd_diskova_pomo%C4%87u_k3b > but you will need little bit of Serbian language to read it. > > Actually probably you could follow article even if you do not speak > Serbian as the language is generic and there are only three important > steps you need to do. > > Step 1 Editing your /boot/loader.conf file with > > atapicam_load="YES" > hw.ata.ata_dma="1" > hw.ata.atapi_dma="1" > > since FreeBSD is using atapicam device to write DVD > > > Step 2 Edit your /etc/devfs.conf with various permission. Most of those > are needed for a work station anyway > > perm /dev/acd0 0666 > perm /dev/cd00666 I'm more comfortable with putting users in a group (operator, burner, whatever) and setting perms to 660 .. but anyway .. > # Commonly used by many ports > > link cd0 cdrom > link cd0 dvd > link cd0 rdvd > > link acd0 cdrom > link acd0 dvd > link acd0 rdvd All good stuff, but just one point that Roland Smith picked up on in another incarnation of this topic recently .. 'link' in devfs makes a symlink in /dev, and you can't make two symlinks with the same name. On my 5.5-S system I'd long had in devfs.conf: linkacd0cdrom linkcd0 cdrom but ls -l /dev/cdrom shows lrwxr-xr-x 1 root wheel 4 Nov 28 01:27 /dev/cdrom -> acd0 so it seems the first link is made and any subsequent silently ignored (or at least, I haven't spotted any console messages complaining of it) > # Misc other devices > > permcdrom 0666 > permdvd 0666 > permrdvd0666 > permxpt00666 > permpass0 0666 > > > Step 3 Edit your /etc/fstab file if you want to use K3b as a normal user > since the disk has to be mounted on the mount point which belong to you > > > [pedja@ /usr/home/Pedja]$ more /etc/fstab > #These are my options > /dev/cd0 /usr/home/Pedja/mnt/cdrom cd9660 rw, noauto 0 0 > /dev/acd0/usr/home/Pedja/mnt/cdrom cd9660 rw, noauto 0 0 > > > > You do not need HAL for things to work but is not going to heart. > > > Also read > > make showinfo /usr/ports/sysutils/k3b If I ever get a DVD writer and want to try k3b, I'll start here thanks. Cheers, Ian ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
On Sun, 9 Dec 2007 07:33 am, Gary Kline wrote: > > Folks, > > IFF k3b works, and I think it might, I'll put up a howto > on my bsd virtual site. Make this domain more useful. > The help from this group has been outstanding, but getting things > CD and DVD actually working has been a study in persseverancce. > I don't use k3b so what capability it has is not known to me. > That said, first,if there is a website for total dweebs, please > post it; or send it privately. I just bought some "Memorex > DVD+RW" ; I want to record a 117 minute commercial DVD. > On the back on the DVDs is says these are only good for 60 minutes > in great qualty; it is good up to 120 minutes, and so on. The nominal capacity of the single sided DVD is 120 minutes but some 32 different definitions are recognised including: EP -- extended play - 360 minutes LP -- long play - 240 minutes SP -- standard play - 120 minutes FINE - 60 minutes But how are you getting your source? What definition is it in? > Nutshell: how good will k3b and my Pioneer burner do on dubbing > this professioally recorded disc? As I've already said I know little of k3b but you'll probably need some sort of authoring/editing software and possibly another package for compression/definition conversion. > Also, Does thw "RW" mean tthat > I can re-tape over this with another edu DVD? Yes, it means that the total disk can be rewritten -- but the ability to edit without rewriting all can be quite limited. And RW disks can have a rather limited rewrite life -- some 10s of times. > > gary > > PS: I much prefer analogue cassettes; I've been taping stuff >since I taped "American Bandstand" off the TV :-) EP or LP modes with 6 or 4 hour capacity would probably both cater for a better quality than your analogue cassettes. > > > > Malcolm ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
Gary Kline wrote: On Sat, Dec 08, 2007 at 02:18:25PM -0700, Predrag Punosevac wrote: Gary Kline wrote: Folks, IFF k3b works, and I think it might, I'll put up a howto on my bsd virtual site. Make this domain more useful. The help from this group has been outstanding, but getting things CD and DVD actually working has been a study in persseverancce. That said, first,if there is a website for total dweebs, please post it; or send it privately. I just bought some "Memorex DVD+RW" ; I want to record a 117 minute commercial DVD. On the back on the DVDs is says these are only good for 60 minutes in great qualty; it is good up to 120 minutes, and so on. Nutshell: how good will k3b and my Pioneer burner do on dubbing this professioally recorded disc? Also, Does thw "RW" mean tthat I can re-tape over this with another edu DVD? gary PS: I much prefer analogue cassettes; I've been taping stuff since I taped "American Bandstand" off the TV :-) I wrote K3b how to http://www.bsd-srbija.org/dokumentacija/doku.php/rezanje_cd_i_dvd_diskova_pomo%C4%87u_k3b but you will need little bit of Serbian language to read it. Actually, my best friend for > 30 years comes from [ what was ] Yugoslavia; so he could surely help me with the translation. I think I have the k3b stuff actually workinng. As of late FFriday night, k3b ran thru all of its tests.That wasn't my question. I want to know more about what DVD blanks are good,better,best, and whether it is worth "wasting" a blank DVD in trying to copy a DVD that I borrowed from the library. I've googled arouund, tryiiing to get some kind of specs that an EE can understand ... even if he kknows nothing about figital video. I think that duplicating DVDs works like a charm on FreeBSD but I think there is a better software in ports for that of K3b which is kind a all in one generic GUI application. This is also a useful link http://www.dvddemystified.com/dvdfaq.html if you are trying to understand DVD business. There are definitely people on this mailing list or on OpenBSD mailing list (I do not remember any more as I am on both mailing lists) who have fantastic knowledge of DVD writable medias, proprietary Video Formats and various issues that come with that including the issues of regional coding and by that I do not mean just USA vs Europe or Asia. Even inside of U. S. where I have being g living for the past 12 years there are many different regional formats. I am clueless about it. As a mathematician I am probably much less capable of understanding DVD technical issues than you. To be perfectly honest as a professional mathematician I am very concern with the status of TeX port and the fact that two years after teTeX was abolished by TeX community in favor of TeXLive there are no even indication that the TeXLive will be ported to FreeBSD. Even in the most crude form (4 packages) as it is done in OpenBSD would be better than noting. Of course the Debian way (30 or so packages) would be my preferable way as TeXLive is developing really rapidly in some areas. My knowledge of porting is unfortunately inadequate to be able to help with such a major project. Cheers, Predrag thanks for your email; it was one of the postings that helped me get atapicam stuff *working* :-) gary Actually probably you could follow article even if you do not speak Serbian as the language is generic and there are only three important steps you need to do. Step 1 Editing your /boot/loader.conf file with atapicam_load="YES" hw.ata.ata_dma="1" hw.ata.atapi_dma="1" since FreeBSD is using atapicam device to write DVD Step 2 Edit your /etc/devfs.conf with various permission. Most of those are needed for a work station anyway perm /dev/acd0 0666 perm /dev/cd00666 # Commonly used by many ports link cd0 cdrom link cd0 dvd link cd0 rdvd link acd0 cdrom link acd0 dvd link acd0 rdvd # Misc other devices permcdrom 0666 permdvd 0666 permrdvd0666 permxpt00666 permpass0 0666 Step 3 Edit your /etc/fstab file if you want to use K3b as a normal user since the disk has to be mounted on the mount point which belong to you [pedja@ /usr/home/Pedja]$ more /etc/fstab #These are my options /dev/cd0 /usr/home/Pedja/mnt/cdrom cd9660 rw, noauto 0 0 /dev/acd0/usr/home/Pedja/mnt/cdrom cd9660 rw, noauto 0 0 You do not need HAL for things to work but is not going to heart. Also read make showinfo /usr/ports/sysutils/k3b Best, Predrag ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, s
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
Gary Kline wrote: > IFF k3b works, and I think it might, I'll put up a howto > on my bsd virtual site. K3b certainly works to burn CDs and DVDs under FreeBSD. I have used it many times on several burners. Of course you need to kldload atapicam for that. What does not work on any of my burners is burncd. By the way if you want to copy 8 Gigs DVD on 4 Gigs DVD, i can recommend you k9copy, which is fantastic. Does as well as dvdshrink, and very fast. -- Michel TALON ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"
Re: copying DVD material :: somewhat OT.
Gary Kline wrote: Folks, IFF k3b works, and I think it might, I'll put up a howto on my bsd virtual site. Make this domain more useful. The help from this group has been outstanding, but getting things CD and DVD actually working has been a study in persseverancce. That said, first,if there is a website for total dweebs, please post it; or send it privately. I just bought some "Memorex DVD+RW" ; I want to record a 117 minute commercial DVD. On the back on the DVDs is says these are only good for 60 minutes in great qualty; it is good up to 120 minutes, and so on. Nutshell: how good will k3b and my Pioneer burner do on dubbing this professioally recorded disc? Also, Does thw "RW" mean tthat I can re-tape over this with another edu DVD? gary PS: I much prefer analogue cassettes; I've been taping stuff since I taped "American Bandstand" off the TV :-) I wrote K3b how to http://www.bsd-srbija.org/dokumentacija/doku.php/rezanje_cd_i_dvd_diskova_pomo%C4%87u_k3b but you will need little bit of Serbian language to read it. Actually probably you could follow article even if you do not speak Serbian as the language is generic and there are only three important steps you need to do. Step 1 Editing your /boot/loader.conf file with atapicam_load="YES" hw.ata.ata_dma="1" hw.ata.atapi_dma="1" since FreeBSD is using atapicam device to write DVD Step 2 Edit your /etc/devfs.conf with various permission. Most of those are needed for a work station anyway perm /dev/acd0 0666 perm /dev/cd00666 # Commonly used by many ports link cd0 cdrom link cd0 dvd link cd0 rdvd link acd0 cdrom link acd0 dvd link acd0 rdvd # Misc other devices permcdrom 0666 permdvd 0666 permrdvd0666 permxpt00666 permpass0 0666 Step 3 Edit your /etc/fstab file if you want to use K3b as a normal user since the disk has to be mounted on the mount point which belong to you [pedja@ /usr/home/Pedja]$ more /etc/fstab #These are my options /dev/cd0 /usr/home/Pedja/mnt/cdrom cd9660 rw, noauto 0 0 /dev/acd0/usr/home/Pedja/mnt/cdrom cd9660 rw, noauto 0 0 You do not need HAL for things to work but is not going to heart. Also read make showinfo /usr/ports/sysutils/k3b Best, Predrag ___ freebsd-questions@freebsd.org mailing list http://lists.freebsd.org/mailman/listinfo/freebsd-questions To unsubscribe, send any mail to "[EMAIL PROTECTED]"