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2007-12-02
, 10:59
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Posts: 93 |
Thanked: 73 times |
Joined on Sep 2006
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#42
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Well, theoretically ALSA should be supported there (configure script is explicitly feeded with '--enable-alsa' option), but looks like something was lost when tweaking build system for OS2008 support and 'extras devel' repository. Probably Ed_ can have a look at this issue and try to solve it.
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2007-12-03
, 06:46
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Posts: 503 |
Thanked: 267 times |
Joined on Jul 2006
@ Helsinki
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#43
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mplayer (1.0rc1-maemo.23) unstable; urgency=low
* added menu icons 26x26,48x48,64x64
* debian/control: added AM icon
* fixed audio/video sync problems when using libmad
to play videos with variable bitrate mp3 soundtracks
* persistent audio volume settings for sdl
* videos are now listed in alphabetical order in gui
The Following 5 Users Say Thank You to Serge For This Useful Post: | ||
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2007-12-03
, 08:13
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Posts: 323 |
Thanked: 118 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
@ Australia
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#44
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2007-12-03
, 09:12
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Posts: 209 |
Thanked: 31 times |
Joined on Oct 2006
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#45
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2007-12-03
, 09:14
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Posts: 2 |
Thanked: 0 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#46
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2007-12-03
, 10:38
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Posts: 503 |
Thanked: 267 times |
Joined on Jul 2006
@ Helsinki
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#47
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The Following 2 Users Say Thank You to Serge For This Useful Post: | ||
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2007-12-03
, 11:35
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Posts: 323 |
Thanked: 118 times |
Joined on Nov 2007
@ Australia
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#48
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2007-12-03
, 12:57
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Posts: 209 |
Thanked: 31 times |
Joined on Oct 2006
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#49
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2007-12-03
, 19:35
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Posts: 13 |
Thanked: 1 time |
Joined on Nov 2007
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#50
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I am rather impressed with the decoding performance. My personal benchmark would be that Mplayer takes common XVID files without re-encoding and without dropping frames in too obvious a way.
These are my subjective results:
Standard TV series encoding (350MB)
624 x 352pix file, XviD 1.2 SMP, 23.976frames/second, 1092kbps avg. bitrate. Sound: 48000Hz 127 kb/s tot , Joint Stereo LAME3.96r
This file played well in still scenes, and the smooth scaling to fullscreen was impressive. Quite a lot of frames were dropped when there was a lot of motion plus detail (e.g. busy & sharp backgrounds like tree-leaves while panning the camera, explosions with debris). Perfect AV sync though until the end of the file.
Sound quality was okay, though I noticed a ringing harshness in the high mids that sounded a bit like low-bit sampling artifacts to my ears. Also, unrelated to the harshness, I noticed a semi-regular clicking noise in the soundtrack that is absent when played back on a PC.
Pixar Short film encoding (63MB)
672 x 352 pix file, XviD 1.1.2 Final, 25.000 frames/second, 2307kbps avg. bitrate. Sound: 48000Hz 384 kb/s tot , 6 chnls (3/2 .1) 0x2000 (Dolby AC3) AC3
This was a joy to watch most of the time. The sound was really great, and Mplayer coped well with the multichannel AC3. Again, fast-moving details led to dropped frames, though audio & video were always in sync.
Full-length movie (800MB)
632 x 258pix file, XviD 1.0.3, 23.976 frames/second, 688kbps avg. bitrate. Sound: 48000Hz 112 kb/s tot , Stereo
The low Y resolution of the film showed through in aliasing artifacts on the image for small details like striped shirts (not an Mplayer problem, though I wonder whether this could be further masked with post-processing filters). There were very few dropped frames, except for a sequence with fireworks, which spawned many light particles as well as specks of dust. Again, this had no adverse effect on AV sync, and audio remained unaffected.
In this file, too, there was a ringing harshness in the sound as described above, an overly metallic-digital quality to it.
So overall, I am very pleased with Mplayer! Thanks, Serge, for the hard work! The only downsides I can see at the moment are that I wish MP3 sound were a little more rounded, and high-movement / high-detail scenes for XVID encodes wouldn't drop so many frames - though this might well not be possible on this type of hardware. Thumbs up.