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The funny thing is that until I started watching Apple keynotes windows media player and macromedia flash player were all I ever needed to see every media format I ever came across on the internet. On Linux in contrast just about every video file I came across wouldn't work and depending on the distribution's policy on including mp3 support that might not work either. If those two formats were all WMP needed than I don't see why it would be so hard for Novell to license them along with the main Quicktime formats.
Please, don't play stupid.
On any modern distro on day1 you can activate a repository, and install all you need in ONE command.
And you'll never bother about codecs again.
With pretty much every player.
Would you please compare with windows?
The only solution I know is using VLC (that guess what, comes from linux).




Member since:
2005-07-06
But you have to do the same with XP? By default, you can only play wma and mp3 out of the box. You need to install video codecs to play anything other than wmv and simple Intel video / basic avi's and mpg.
The one saving grace of both Linux and Windows is VLC - fits both platforms and plays most formats reliably. Saves having to download codecs
Edited 2006-02-04 01:23