Linux video: Difference between revisions

From miki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
== Related Pages
* See [[Sound]] for Linux sound systems
* See [[Audio]] for audio support on Linux
* See [[Video]] for video support on Linux

== MPlayer==
== MPlayer==



Revision as of 17:53, 12 May 2011

== Related Pages

  • See Sound for Linux sound systems
  • See Audio for audio support on Linux
  • See Video for video support on Linux

MPlayer

External links


Playing video files

MPlayer plays video files. Many video formats are supported. To play a file:

mplayer <SOMEFILE>

Here a short summary of keyboard shortcuts that can be used during playback:

Key Function
Left Right Forward / backward 10 seconds
Down Up Forward / backward 1 minutes
PgDn PgUp Forward / backward 10 minutes

Some frequently-used options:

mplayer -xy 2 <SOMEFILE>       # Plays a file with a scale factor of 2


Playing DVD's

Here some handy examples. Mplayer can also be used to play dvd files directly from the harddisk. Check man mplayer for more examples.

mplayer dvd://1                                  # Quick start playing dvd from dvd-reader
mplayer dvd://5-7                                # Only plays titles 5 to 7
mplayer dvd://1 -dvd-device /path/to/directory/  # Play DVD title 1 from a directory with VOB files
mplayer dvd://1 -alang fr -slang en              # Play in Japanese with French subtitles

bug: There is apparently a bug that prevents subtitles to be displayed even though the option -slang is given on the command-line. As a workaround press the key J while playback to cycle through the subtitles.

Creating a ScreenCast

From [1]:

  1. Created an Intrepid instance in VirtualBox.
  2. Used gtk-recordmydesktop to record only the VirtualBox window.
  3. Create the intro and outro slides in OOo and recorded them using gtk-recordmydesktop.
  4. Import all three clips into Pitivi and exported them as a single ogv.
  5. Recorded the speech in Audacity while watching the screencast and exported it as a wav file.
  6. Converted the ogv to an avi using mencoder.
  7. Imported the avi and wav into avidemux, mashed them together and saved an avi.
  8. Used ffmpeg2theora to convert it back to an ogv.

Another solution: http://wiki.ubuntu.com/ScreencastTeam