On Sunday 15 January 2006 14:22, Lee Revell wrote:
On Sun, 2006-01-15 at 19:08 +0000, guy wrote:
Hi
I have read several comments about ogg format & Windoze & want to
highlight what seems a very well kept secret. There is a brilliant
& tiny (592kb!) open source media player for Windoze called
coolplayer. It runs straight from the binary
without need for installation. If you want to stick to an open
music format it is very easy for anyone to obtain. The bottom line
is folks, anyone can easily & freely have a means of playing ogg
files on a windoze box.
The url is
http://coolplayer.sourceforge.net/ & the zip file
download is only 318kb.
Hope you do not feel this is OT as it concerns sharing music in an
open format.
Personally I think it's a losing battle to ask Windows users to use
anything but WMP. Like it or not MP3 is the standard. We need to
make MP3 "Just Work" on Linux.
MP3 is not a "closed format" it just has some patent issues (which may
not be issues at all).
I find it amusing that so many people who won't use MP3 due to its
"encumbrance" will happily run the proprietary Nvidia driver...
The difference in the audio is that we DO have a choice, and in case
you've never done an A-B test, a megabyte a minute ogg is far less
tiresome to listen to than a megabyte a minute mp3. Also, I was in on
the negotiations if you could call it that, for an mp3 license for a
web music site several years ago. For a startup site, built with linux
on a 500 dollar machine they also built, the fees they wanted just for
them to be able to serve mp3's were so onerous they went ogg only.
They started out asking for $25k.
In the case of the video, the choice is to run an ati card, but then I'm
not a gamer that needs 400 frames a second, so this ati 9200SE works
very well indeed here with the inkernel drivers, and beaucoup faster
than the budget nvidia that went before it. Unforch, the nvidia
shorted out something on the buss and blew the motherboard. When I
bought a new motherboard, I was so upset with nvidia that I was bound
to buy something, anything, else but another nvidia. And getting the
nvidia driver to work was such a hassle that I don't think I ran it for
more than a week all told, the nv driver, while too slow for tuxracer,
was stable and did everything else I needed to do on a 1600x1200x32 bit
screen. Tuxracer plays fine on this ati, which is no doubt faint
praise, but it at least works.
Lee
--
Cheers, Gene
People having trouble with vz bouncing email to me should add the word
'online' between the 'verizon', and the dot which bypasses vz's
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Copyright 2005 by Maurice Eugene Heskett, all rights reserved.