Install VLC on the linux machine, set it up to do remote streaming, then
install VLC on the Air, and have it connect to that stream. It's been a
while since I've done that, but I think I remember writing a shell script to
use the CLI version of VLC to open the DVD and start streaming it. Check
http
Gave it a shot, like the others mentioned - the site is extremely slow in
responding. Doesn't seem to be network related, looks like server load
issues.
That said, it didn't work for me using Gnash on a Fedora 8 kick I installed
to test it for you, but it does work on Fedora 10 x64 beta flash plug
Pedro,
That was a bit harsh for a response, to somebody trying to help - whether or
not it resolved your issue. That said, see
http://forums.fedoraforum.org/showthread.php?t=205360 - it seems to be a
common issue with some nVidia cards and the live cd. That was the first
result in Google. My lapto
Just out of curiosity, move ~/.mozilla somewhere else temporarily, then give
it a shot. That'll get rid of all plugins/customized settings/etc. Start FF,
and see what you get. I just upgraded FF to 3.0.5 and it still displays
fine. I'm running Adblock Plus 1.x currently, and nothing else. Disabled
Renders fine for me...
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; U; Linux x86_64; en-US; rv:1.9.0.4) Gecko/2008111217
Fedora/3.0.4-1.fc10 Firefox/3.0.4
[orma...@ormandj-laptop ~]$ rpm -qi firefox
Name: firefox Relocations: (not relocatable)
Version : 3.0.4 Ven
As an interested new Fedora user, who would like to avoid proprietary
software - is Gnash the way I should be looking? I've heard of another
project, swfdec, but never been told which option is better supported/has
more developer activity/tends to work best.
Flash usage for me is fairly limited, I