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2007-12-09
, 22:46
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Posts: 550 |
Thanked: 110 times |
Joined on Aug 2006
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#2
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2007-12-09
, 23:42
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Posts: 201 |
Thanked: 88 times |
Joined on Aug 2007
@ San Francisco, CA
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#3
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2007-12-09
, 23:50
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Posts: 550 |
Thanked: 110 times |
Joined on Aug 2006
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#4
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2007-12-10
, 00:30
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Posts: 149 |
Thanked: 9 times |
Joined on Jan 2007
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#5
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2007-12-10
, 01:42
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Posts: 550 |
Thanked: 110 times |
Joined on Aug 2006
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#6
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2007-12-10
, 05:54
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Posts: 739 |
Thanked: 242 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
@ Montreal
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#7
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2007-12-10
, 09:41
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Posts: 356 |
Thanked: 231 times |
Joined on Oct 2007
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#8
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2007-12-10
, 11:31
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Posts: 2,102 |
Thanked: 1,309 times |
Joined on Sep 2006
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#9
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2007-12-10
, 12:05
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Posts: 42 |
Thanked: 6 times |
Joined on Sep 2007
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#10
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It struck me as odd, then, that the default media player would not play .oggs even after the third-party GStreamer plugin for it has been installed. I'd note that Windows Media Player would happily play OGGs after the DirectShow filter has been installed, and likewise with QuickTime Player. Even iTunes would play OGGs, though refusing to index the metadata properly.
So this begs the obvious question -- is the media player only playing an officially-sanctioned whitelist of file formats?
The situation gets even more worrying with the new position paper attached to the HTML5 video workgroup discussion, calling Ogg formats "proprietary". What gives?