Kevin J. Cummings wrote: > Kevin J. Cummings wrote: >> Dan wrote: >>> Sound and video are encoded separately. If the video is fine, then it >>> seems like a sound decoding issue. See if you can check what codec is >>> being used (i just go to the properties in Nautilus, on the Audio/Video >>> tab, probably some terminal command you can use); all the videos I have >>> right now have mp3 audio. >>> -Dan >> Here's the cut/paste from mplayer: >> >> Selected audio codec: [mp3] afm: mp3lib (mp3lib MPEG layer-2, layer-3) OK, I looked at various .mpg files on my system (including the one produced by my capture card), and nautilus says that the audio is all MPEG-1 (with various bit-rates). > OK, further test point, xine plays my .mpgs just fine. It is mplayer > which has the problem. xine also plays my .mp3 files just fine, while > mplayer chokes on them. So, I think I've narrowed it down to mplayer. I running mplayer from the greysector FC5 repository. The various rpms are: > mplayer-codecs-20050412-1.i386 > mplayer-vidix-1.0pre8-0.7.20060418.i386 > mplayer-1.0pre8-0.7.20060418.i386 > mplayer-gui-1.0pre8-0.7.20060418.i386 > mplayer-codecs-extra-20050412-1.i386 > mplayerplug-in-3.25-1.lvn5.i386 (OK, mplayerplug-in comes from livna) I've seen .tar.gz files for codecs that are newer than 20050412, but no rpms.... -- Kevin J. Cummings kjchome@xxxxxxx cummings@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx cummings@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Registered Linux User #1232 (http://counter.li.org) -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list