The latest version of Silverlight supports 3rd-party codecs via the raw AV pipeline, as mentioned in the release notes. Given that Cortado is a rather inadequate solution for those using browsers without native Ogg support, and Silverlight's install base is steadily increasing, perhaps a Silverlight-based Ogg player should be added as an option? Is there any project ongoing at bringing a Silverlight-based Ogg Vorbis/Theora viewing option that I can get involved in? Tuxcantfly ( talk) 20:43, 11 November 2009 (UTC) Reply An Ogg Vorbis player in Silverlight has already been implemented a Theora version would also be possible. In fact a pure C# Theora decoder has already been written all that remains is to create the hooks to the Silverlight raw AV pipeline API.Tuxcantfly ( talk) 21:13, 11 November 2009 (UTC) Reply And there now apparently exists a plugin by Nuanti that does just this Tuxcantfly ( talk) 00:23, 6 February 2010 (UTC) Reply įirefox 3.5 isn't the only browser that can play OGG natively, so can Google Chrome (as of version 3).Nintendo Maniac 64 ( talk) 05:42, 25 September 2009 (UTC) Reply Also, the Google Chrome Frame plugin for IE would work as well, but I don't know if Wikipedia is currently set up to aknowledge use of the plugin. Wikipedia pages don't have the "X-UA-Compatible" "chrome=1" meta tag, so Chrome Frame isn't used on IE.Tuxcantfly ( talk) 22:04, 11 November 2009 (UTC) Reply I'm-a shakin.I have just tested a freshly installed Google Chrome 3.0.196.2 (see Commons:Help talk:Converting video#test.avi results) and I find it plays the thumbnails in wikimedia commons Ok, but it fails to play the uploaded files and it fails to play OGG files locally. And then manually type the chrome://plugins/ and press enter. So what's up with my simple GUI program loading a browser plugin? Hey, the realplayer downloader plugin for chrome shows the below steps for it is as follows: First open the Google chrome in the new windows. Download VLC Version 3.0.18 Windows 64bit 40 MB Simple, fast and powerful Plays everything - Files, Discs, Webcams, Devices and Streams. I have since read there was a zero-day exploit discovered last week having to do with Java. VLC is a free and open source cross-platform multimedia player and framework that plays most multimedia files as well as DVDs, Audio CDs, VCDs, and various streaming protocols. Other features of the Real Alternative codec, apart from the Internet browser plugin, are the DirectShow splitter, the RealMedia Codecs and the Media Player Classic included. I did have Java and a RealPlayer plugin running in Firefox. Furthermore, the RealMedia browser plugin ensures support for Internet Explorer, Opera, Netscape, Google Chrome and Mozilla. I never use Chrome, only Mozilla Firefox. My ap is a Windows GUI that has nothing to do with the web, Chrome, or any browser of any kind. It said the application had loaded RealPlayer\BrowserRecordPlugin\Chrome\Hook\rpchrome150browserrecordhelper.dll. Then I noticed something very puzzling in the output-window of the IDE (Visual C++ 2010 Express). Norton said they were clean and trusted.Īnyway, my application crashed. At least two of the open source packages came as precompiled binaries. You can integrate the RealPlayer plugin into a Web browser like Google Chrome in just a few clicks. If you are using Google Chrome to download videos, try disabling PepperFlash by following the steps given in the link: https. Firefox keeps blaming Real Player for their plugin not working but I think Firefox could repair a compatibility issue. It was not playing well with the new versions of the open source software it links to. Too bad, I used Firefox for 4 or 5 years without a hitch. I was trying to build and run an application I wrote a long time ago. Click the icon and youll open the 'plugins' menu.
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