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Old September 13th 19, 05:23 PM posted to alt.os.linux,comp.os.linux.advocacy,alt.comp.os.windows-10
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Default Why Linux On Desktop Failed: A Discussion With Mark Shuttleworth

In article , Rabid Rogue
wrote:

Why Linux On Desktop Failed: A Discussion With Mark Shuttleworth

Let me know when there's a transcript available; I don't 'do' video
interviews.

That recent Shuttleworth interview on Kubernetes had a transcript.

What's the matter, can't you get Linux to play the video?
Too bad for you.

That's an unfair question. To be honest, Linux plays more video formats
out of the box than any other operating system even if VLC isn't
pre-installed.


no it definitely does not.


This is a clear lie on your part and I imagine that it comes from your
general and habitual ignorance. Install Linux Mint and it will play
everything; install something like Trisquel which is fully free and it
might not play everything, but it will install free codecs that will.


it won't play everything.

platforms used for creating video, namely mac and windows, have the
widest support of formats for obvious reasons.

If it doesn't play the video, it gives you the option to
install the codec which WILL play it.


so much for more video formats, and that's the same for other oses.


Windows 10 will not play h.265 out of the box unless you _purchase_ the
codec but I imagine you didn't know that.


what you clearly do *not* know is that macs have h.265 support in the
os itself and can play *and* encode h.265 out of the box without any
additional software, and third party apps do not need to do anything
special either.

You can download VLC and get
the same functionality but that applies to Linux as well. Even without
VLC though, the bundled video players like Dragon or Totem will
automatically download the codecs whereas something like Movies & TV or
Windows Media Player will only play sound and fart when it comes to
playing the video.


no need for vlc, and needing to download a codec means it *doesn't*
play everything.
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