Re: Why is Fedora a multimedia disaster? - Here is why.

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]



I just thought of a means to help improve overall media capabilities perceptions of Fedora in the live media (CD/DVDs), and who knows? could even benefit the installed version as well. It occurred to me right after having to boot a system with a Knoppix LiveDVD disk to perform a rescue (I did not have my handy Fedora RescueCD handy, but I had my Knoppix LiveDVD disk available). Long story made short: I helped a friend with his computer with Windows XP which happened to be trashed, and he wanted to rescue all his data, but the problem was he was being unable to boot Windows to perform said backup, so I offered to help him. Booted the LiveDVD into the desktop (I've many ideas for improvement of the Live media based on this last experience, which I may end up sending to the LiveCD mailing list) and started backing his stuff up. While the network transfer was running, he started roaming in the distro and found out the example "media" file OpenSource.ogg (Open Source song) and it struck me like lightning... But before I lay out my idea, my friend really liked the fact of "sample media", so I thought:

* What if to improve this "media perception" Fedora was to include some sample material in ogg/theora format in the Live media? A tour video, and some sample music would be terrific. The tunes are not THAT hard to get, especially when we have at our disposal great sources like the Linux Audio Users mailing list and website [1][2]. There are some great tunes that are free to use shared through the list by the authors themselves, a little note and an e-mail to the authors asking their permission to include their material with the Live media/distribution benefits us all (they get more exposure, we showcase free formats), and the same goes for video files... These are a bit trickier to get right, but there could even be a music sample package available links and notes in the wiki, etc... I think this is a more proactive approach than a reactive one.

* Another thing I thought would also be beneficial is to include some sort of "manifesto" right into the home directory as a sample document in various formats: .abw, .txt, .ps, .pdf, HTML, etc. which contained a "summarized" version of the release notes in a more "user friendly" language (i.e less technical, more colloquial wording, not as thorough) and explaining there (again being extra careful with wording to avoid misunderstandings and not being legally pedantic) why closed formats aren't being used in the distribution, and even give some pointers to CodecBuddy, or how to get legitimate means to play these formats, but which fall beyond the support of the distro as such because that's not Free and Open Source software (concrete example: Real Player), by indicating that it is possible, and stating the reasons why such support is not included, I don't think we're going against any policies or principles. We wouldn't just be saying what can't be done (which for all intents and purposes *is* a brick wall), but also offering a possible solution. Solution which is not part of the distribution, as there's a conflict of interests, philosophies, objectives and goals; but being the user a prime concern, there's both education and pointers toward possible means in the same document. No need for google/ask-in-forums/trash Linux in general and Fedora in particular. The same goes for proprietary drivers and such. The fact that Fedora can't carry them, doesn't mean we have to remain silent as to point the users to potentially solve a problem.

That I believe is what really makes a distribution "user friendly". The fact that Fedora doesn't ship with proprietary software (driver or application programs), doesn't mean necessarily that we have to shut off users who might need to find the means to perform a certain task, instead showing them where they can look for means to solve their problems should be more helpful. For instance, instead of directly linking to the download page of either Real, nVidia or AMD (ATi), point towards wiki posts, forums, documentation where the users can examine and finally decide whether they want/need such solutions or not.

This is relevant for the Desktop users as well, as I believe the same could be done for the installed version.


[1] http://music.columbia.edu/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user
[2]http://lau.linuxaudio.org/

--
Fedora-desktop-list mailing list
Fedora-desktop-list@xxxxxxxxxx
https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-desktop-list

[Index of Archives]     [Fedora Users]     [Fedora KDE]     [Fedora Announce]     [Fedora Docs]     [Fedora Config]     [PAM]     [Red Hat Development]     [Red Hat 9]     [Gimp]     [Yosemite News]

  Powered by Linux