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2012-03-12
, 14:05
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Posts: 479 |
Thanked: 1,284 times |
Joined on Jan 2012
@ Enschede, The Netherlands
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#52
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2012-03-12
, 14:12
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Posts: 1,038 |
Thanked: 1,408 times |
Joined on Feb 2010
@ London
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#53
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By default the only videos you can share via DLNA are videos taken on the device. That's a restriction indirectly imposed by DLNA as we had to chose for a set of profiles we support. If you want to change that, drop to the shell, edit /home/user/.config/rygel.conf and change strict-sharing to false.
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2012-03-12
, 14:22
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Posts: 108 |
Thanked: 179 times |
Joined on Feb 2012
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#54
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2012-03-12
, 14:22
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Posts: 108 |
Thanked: 179 times |
Joined on Feb 2012
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#55
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2012-03-12
, 14:27
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Posts: 108 |
Thanked: 179 times |
Joined on Feb 2012
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#56
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Oh. ... Is there any documentation that covers things like this?
The /etc/rygel.conf config file says
Thanks. I had to reboot to get the change noticed. Is there a more elegant way?Code:# In most cases, you would want to use the rygel-preferences UI rather than # editing this file by hand.
Now the n900 sees the videos. Can't play them of course - the stock media player always was useless. So I try the Seagate media player: selecting "Media on N9" now just gives an empty list. "Plug and Pray" indeed.
Googled "rygel", installed it on my desktop, run, see it on the N900 media player (no DNLA client on the N9?), see the folders for music, pictures,etc. But trying to open one just gets a permanent "wait" icon. AAARGH! At least we can rely on USB mass-storage to work.
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2012-03-12
, 20:05
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Posts: 79 |
Thanked: 31 times |
Joined on Oct 2011
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#57
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Sorry, that's wrong. UPnP on the router is to allow any device that supports it to do basic queries about current outbound connectivity and port forwarding. That's covered by the UPnP Internet Gateway Device specification. This has absolutely _nothing_ to do with the UPnP AV specifications. You do not need a router's UPnP support to use UPnP enabled media devices in your network.
UPnP is a standardization group covering a vast amount of topics, not only media sharing.
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2012-03-13
, 15:44
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Posts: 108 |
Thanked: 179 times |
Joined on Feb 2012
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#58
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i'm not saying that you need it to make it work. but that it's generally supposed to help make it easier for the user by doing those basic tasks itself.
i'm not sure if the N9 even uses upnp, but i know the ps3 does hence why i suggested it.
The Following User Says Thank You to phako For This Useful Post: | ||
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2012-03-14
, 05:25
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Posts: 664 |
Thanked: 160 times |
Joined on Jul 2008
@ Australia
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#59
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2012-03-14
, 09:09
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Posts: 108 |
Thanked: 179 times |
Joined on Feb 2012
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#60
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I tried with my PS3 and every thing is showing - Video, Pictures & Music but none of them work. I can see the video files but while trying to play them it gives the format not supported. For music it shows all the album folders but nothing inside them - "No items to show". Same for other categories in the music. For pictures is just shows the category like by date etc but inside them again nothing. Any suggestion??
The /etc/rygel.conf config file says
Now the n900 sees the videos. Can't play them of course - the stock media player always was useless. So I try the Seagate media player: selecting "Media on N9" now just gives an empty list. "Plug and Pray" indeed.
Googled "rygel", installed it on my desktop, run, see it on the N900 media player (no DNLA client on the N9?), see the folders for music, pictures,etc. But trying to open one just gets a permanent "wait" icon. AAARGH! At least we can rely on USB mass-storage to work.
Last edited by myk; 2012-03-12 at 14:22.