Alberto Ruiz wrote: > As per other technical/political details, Cisco is not Fluendo, Indeed. Cisco will actually be WORSE to work with. Fluendo is a company focusing on GNU/Linux and GStreamer. Cisco is primarily a hardware vendor. The binaries they provide for their VPNs are notorious for being complete and utter crap. (Thankfully, there are reverse-engineered free-as-in-speech replacements for those.) And unfortunately, patent licensing costs for H.264 are such that only a company with as deep pockets (and as strong motives to destroy patent-free codecs!) as Cisco can offer a codec with a paid patent license at no cost. > Asking people to include an extra repository is no fix, it's not the > first nor the second time that my Fedora upgrades break because the > rpmfusion packages (specifically GStreamer ones) suddenly has the > ability to install any sort of software in my system and mess with the > integrity of my rpm database. Huh? I never had any such problems with RPM Fusion Free. I'll take a codec built from source by RPM Fusion from the best free-as-in-speech implementation available (which may or may not be the Cisco one, I guess it won't) over a Cisco binary downloaded behind my back by a browser (against our policies, which very clearly disallow prebuilt binaries and automatic code downloads, only data auto-downloads are tolerated) any day. > A media codec should not be a system wide component (I'd go as far as > saying it should not be user-session wide, but application bundled). -1, I couldn't disagree more. A codec MUST be system-wide so that: * all applications can use the codec and * any fixes to the codec apply to all applications at once. Kevin Kofler -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel Fedora Code of Conduct: http://fedoraproject.org/code-of-conduct