Comment at the bottom: --- James Laska <jlaska@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Greetings folks, > > Skilled with testing flash? Have a favorite > flash-based web application > you like to use? > > In order to help provide a go/no_go decision for > several upcoming > features of F9, notting has asked how testing of > those features is > progressing. > > First up ... swfdec. > > I've pulled together a test summary page that > reflects the previously > defined test plan for swfdec. Any assistance in > further defining the > test plan and/or providing test results would be > much appreciated. > > The current test plan for swfdec is available at: > http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Features/Swfdec#head-2ae0f8ae6fefb6af4e9d40f1d104a65913b30f58 > > A rawhide test result summary is available at: > http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/QA/TestResults/Fedora9Swfdec/Rawhide > > Many thanks! > James > > -- > ========================================== > James Laska -- jlaska@xxxxxxxxxx > Quality Engineering -- Red Hat, Inc. > ========================================== > Hi, Have trouble with X11, as well as sorting out needed plug-ins and such in a F8 x86_64. Question: As I have downloaded all web browsers from Fedora, I just wonder if it would be possible to set up a browser with "swfdec" and codecs that are considered acceptable ? I would need help to sort out such a thing, but perhaps it could be interesting for testing ? Firefox is the most used browser, and perhaps a specially stripped browser would be an idea ? ( About patents, legal codecs, mp3, et al. - well, correct me if I am wrong, but some new hardware have some decoders in hardware. If so, I have a problem to see that it would be wrong to use them. Guess the obstacle is lack of info about these devices, and kept somewhat as a secret - at least I have been told that such things exist ) //ARNE -- fedora-test-list mailing list fedora-test-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-test-list