Linux video: Difference between revisions
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== Related Pages == |
== Related Pages == |
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* See [[ |
* See [[Linux sound]] for Linux sound systems |
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* See [[ |
* See [[Linux audio]] for audio support on Linux |
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* See [[ |
* See [[Linux video]] for video support on Linux |
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== MPlayer== |
== MPlayer== |
Revision as of 17:54, 12 May 2011
Related Pages
- See Linux sound for Linux sound systems
- See Linux audio for audio support on Linux
- See Linux 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]:
- Created an Intrepid instance in VirtualBox.
- Used gtk-recordmydesktop to record only the VirtualBox window.
- Create the intro and outro slides in OOo and recorded them using gtk-recordmydesktop.
- Import all three clips into Pitivi and exported them as a single ogv.
- Recorded the speech in Audacity while watching the screencast and exported it as a wav file.
- Converted the ogv to an avi using mencoder.
- Imported the avi and wav into avidemux, mashed them together and saved an avi.
- Used ffmpeg2theora to convert it back to an ogv.
Another solution: http://wiki.ubuntu.com/ScreencastTeam