On Wed, 18 Jul 2007 00:41:30 -0400 Richard Stallman wrote: > mplayer does not encourage the use of proprietary codecs. > > What are the facts on which you base that conclusion?
For a lot of people it is important that they can watch DVDs or listen to their favorite radio on the computer (just to mention two examples). mplayer and libavcodec give you this possibility on a GNU system. It also supports free codecs. BTW all the DVD playback related features and most other codecs and container formats are free software (though some illegal or at least with an unclear legal status in countries with fucked up copyright and patent laws). A mplayer installation w/o any binary only codecs works pretty good for most of the media files. > Your idea of what does or does not encourage the use of proprietary codecs > might be different from ours. > > > We definitely should not support mplayer. > > You (the GNU project) already does so with EMMS. > > What is EMMS, and how does EMMS relate to mplayer? It's an Emacs interface to various command line media players. It also has a lot of features you would expect from a full blown GUI media player, like playlists, ability to browse your media files, managing web streams and a lot more. mplayer is one of the supported players. > IMHO `mplayer' and the strongly related `libavcodec' encourage a lot of > people to switch to a free operating system. > > Many others aim to convince people to migrate to GNU/Linux, often by > forgetting about freedom as a goal. That may be what you are doing > here. Free software somehow has to interact with the "real world", which - sadly - is dominated by proprietary software and file formats. A lot of people switched to free software after free office software became reliable in reading M$ office files. I think the case with mplayer is similar. No one forces you to use the binary only codecs, mplayer already does a pretty good job w/o them (except for listening to BBC radio but hopefully the BBC comes to its sense...). And when it comes to patents or restriction circumventions: the legal status is different from country to country. I don't think this makes mplayer "non free", it's the laws in some countries which restrict the freedom here. David _______________________________________________ gnu-emacs-sources mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnu-emacs-sources
