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Fedora 25 Finally Makes MP3 Playback Easy, Fedora 26 Might Ship It By Default

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  • Mystro256
    replied
    Originally posted by duby229 View Post
    What the article title says is that it finally makes mp3 playback easy, as if double clicking an mp3 was ever a hard thing to do......
    I think they mean legally.

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  • duby229
    replied
    What the article title says is that it finally makes mp3 playback easy, as if double clicking an mp3 was ever a hard thing to do......

    Leave a comment:


  • smitty3268
    replied
    Originally posted by zxy_thf View Post

    Probably only for decoders, otherwise they should provide lame also.
    That's my guess. Wikipedia lists 4 patents expiring in 2017, and they all look encode related to me. The decoding is probably simpler so it would make sense that patents there might have been granted and expiring earlier.

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  • zxy_thf
    replied
    Originally posted by Mystro256 View Post
    I take that the patents are finally ending?
    Probably only for decoders, otherwise they should provide lame also.

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  • Inopia
    replied
    Originally posted by Sethox View Post

    Haven't you learned that Wikipedia is not a great source to have?
    Take Wikipedias source instead, just saying...
    If you take a look at the article and its talk page you can see that Wikipedia actually has a lot of active editing on this subject and editors are battling over the correct date. I cannot think of better source without consulting a patent lawyer as they are doing original research on which patents affect MP3 in the US.

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  • Creak
    replied
    It's not really clear why they fought so long not to include mp3 decoding even just as an official package, and now it's OK.

    The patents aren't ended yet, so why the sudden change of mind?

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  • Mystro256
    replied
    I take that the patents are finally ending?

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  • Sethox
    replied
    Originally posted by Inopia View Post

    Only about a year and all this silliness around MP3 can end.
    Haven't you learned that Wikipedia is not a great source to have?
    Take Wikipedias source instead, just saying...

    Leave a comment:


  • Inopia
    replied
    Originally posted by Wikipedia
    MP3 technology will be patent-free in the United States on 30 December 2017 when U.S. Patent 5,703,999, held by the Fraunhofer-Gesellschaft[66] and administered by Technicolor,[67] expires.
    Only about a year and all this silliness around MP3 can end.

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  • GreatEmerald
    replied
    Hm. Meanwhile here on Tumbleweed, I can't use H.264 on QupZilla, since they can't ship QtWebEngine with that. And Packman doesn't have it packaged either...

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