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What Will Happen To xf86-video-nv In 2010?

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  • #81
    Originally posted by deanjo View Post
    Seems you completely missed the comment that it was in response to.
    I didn't miss the comment. Either you chose to simplfy the argument for the sake of your ad hominem or you have completely misunderstood why a DVD player cannot be distributed.

    No company can legally distribute any software that involves the playback of any of the most popular video codecs with purchasing a license. Period. Doesn't matter if it's legal DVDs, dodgy rips, or even your own legal rips. Red Hat cannot ship a DVD player because they cannot distibute MPEG2 decoders. MPEG2 is a patented video codec licensed by the MPEG-LA. They cannot even ship a DVD player that plays unencrypted streams because they still don't have a license for the codec.

    You mentioned HD streams from cameras and the like, which means you obviously are unaware of the patent issues. Most (all?) HD cameras are either using MPEG2 or MPEG4-AVC. Guess what, MPEG4-AVC is also patent encumbered. Red Hat cannot ship with MPEG4-AVC codecs without purchasing a license from MPEG-LA. Youtube? MPEG4-AVC.

    Nothing to do with DRM what so ever

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    • #82
      Originally posted by yesterday View Post
      In light of this, how exactly are companies like Red Hat supposed to justify spending time (money) on implementing better support for video formats they cannot even legally distribute?
      Most countries have a road speed limit of about 120 Km/h. I wonder how car manufacturers justify spending billions in pushing their engines even further in the way of ilegality. Maybe because that's what their customers want, regardless of what the actual speed limits are? If Red Hat customers are not interested in vido playback--understandable given the scope of their product--it makes no sense to put much effort in it. The rest are rationalisations to justify I don't know what, really.

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      • #83
        Originally posted by yesterday View Post
        I didn't miss the comment. Either you chose to simplfy the argument for the sake of your ad hominem or you have completely misunderstood why a DVD player cannot be distributed.

        No company can legally distribute any software that involves the playback of any of the most popular video codecs with purchasing a license. Period. Doesn't matter if it's legal DVDs, dodgy rips, or even your own legal rips. Red Hat cannot ship a DVD player because they cannot distibute MPEG2 decoders. MPEG2 is a patented video codec licensed by the MPEG-LA. They cannot even ship a DVD player that plays unencrypted streams because they still don't have a license for the codec.

        You mentioned HD streams from cameras and the like, which means you obviously are unaware of the patent issues. Most (all?) HD cameras are either using MPEG2 or MPEG4-AVC. Guess what, MPEG4-AVC is also patent encumbered. Red Hat cannot ship with MPEG4-AVC codecs without purchasing a license from MPEG-LA. Youtube? MPEG4-AVC.

        Nothing to do with DRM what so ever
        You still seem to miss the "Most Linux users playing movie are playing dodgy legal rips of content from other sources" which is a lame excuse as there is NOTHING dodgy about playing rips in many many countries or even the process of creating them. You like to concern yourself on the codecs patents issue however there are even legal means to do that as well through end user purchasable codecs. Many distro's have been offering this for quite some time now.

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        • #84
          Originally posted by yesterday View Post
          No company can legally distribute any software that involves the playback of any of the most popular video codecs with purchasing a license.
          First, this should be read (and be written) as

          No company can legally distribute any software that involves the playback of any of the most popular patented video codecs with purchasing a license on territory of USA or any other patent-slavery country which are not the whole world.
          Second, there are now open, truly open video formats, so justifying poor state of common api for video acceleration by "pirate" nonsense is utterly moronic. "Period".

          Third, i don't believe that Red Hat's main market is home PCs. But i do believe that in "business" with paid support customers would be glad to be able to watch videos in many formats in best quality anyway. And they (customers) even could... Pay!... for patent bullshitism if they must.

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          • #85
            Originally posted by deanjo View Post
            You still seem to miss the "Most Linux users playing movie are playing dodgy legal rips of content from other sources" which is a lame excuse as there is NOTHING dodgy about playing rips in many many countries or even the process of creating them. You like to concern yourself on the codecs patents issue however there are even legal means to do that as well through end user purchasable codecs. Many distro's have been offering this for quite some time now.

            No.

            All rips are dodgy UNLESS they are made with a codec you specifically have a license to use for encoding. Ripping your DVDs or your TV captures with x264 is technically illegal because no one has the right to distribute x264. You cannot use ffmpeg or mplayer for the same reasons legally because legally they don't have the right to distribute any of the popular codec implementations, decoding or encoding.

            Yes, Fluendo offer decoders for popular codecs, but then, like CoreAVC, Fluendo should be responsible for making them run efficiently.

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            • #86
              Originally posted by dfx. View Post
              First, this should be read (and be written) as

              blah blah blah
              Don't be daft.

              Software Patents are currently enforced in USA, UK, Canada, Japan, EU, and Australia. Now what percentage of business would you reckon Novell/Red Hat/Mandriva etc. get from these regions?


              And if you actually read the thread, you would have noticed that it was mentioned that Theora hw accell was in the pipeline... I doubt anyone would care though because I doubt there is even a single person on the this forum who has >60% of videos encoded in Theora

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              • #87
                Originally posted by airlied View Post
                Patents aren't something you can ignore when you work in companies, anyone who thinks they are is just stupid and i invite them to start a company and ignore them.
                Just thought I'd chime in here with an article I found awhile back regarding what you just said. Here's the link.

                Not saying I agree or disagree, just thought that it would add some perspective.

                Comment


                • #88
                  Originally posted by yesterday View Post
                  No.

                  All rips are dodgy UNLESS they are made with a codec you specifically have a license to use for encoding.
                  Sigh wrong, using legally purchased codecs you can.

                  Ripping your DVDs or your TV captures with x264 is technically illegal because no one has the right to distribute x264.
                  Again, use a legal h264 codec.

                  You cannot use ffmpeg or mplayer for the same reasons legally because legally they don't have the right to distribute any of the popular codec implementations, decoding or encoding.
                  This is why you use the hardware facilities on your legal card.

                  Yes, Fluendo offer decoders for popular codecs, but then, like CoreAVC, Fluendo should be responsible for making them run efficiently.
                  Not sure where you get this idea that all acceleration is done in the codec, yes it can be done but then again we would be talking about a software implementation and not support for a hardware implementation. FYI XvMC for example has been around for years and you have had it's use in a free legal way for eons, opensource to boot and supported in free drivers.

                  Comment


                  • #89
                    Originally posted by BlueJayofEvil View Post
                    Just thought I'd chime in here with an article I found awhile back regarding what you just said. Here's the link.

                    Not saying I agree or disagree, just thought that it would add some perspective.
                    Ah, that was an interesting reading. Thanks.

                    Comment


                    • #90
                      Originally posted by yesterday View Post
                      Don't be daft.

                      Software Patents are currently enforced in USA, UK, Canada, Japan, EU, and Australia. Now what percentage of business would you reckon Novell/Red Hat/Mandriva etc. get from these regions?

                      Well read up here :


                      Not in EU, at least not yet ... The main "software patantable" countries seems to be USA, Japan, Korea

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