|
2012-01-30
, 14:58
|
Posts: 345 |
Thanked: 127 times |
Joined on Sep 2010
|
#2
|
|
2012-01-30
, 15:27
|
|
Posts: 1,034 |
Thanked: 784 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
@ Annapolis, MD
|
#3
|
The Following User Says Thank You to cddiede For This Useful Post: | ||
|
2012-01-30
, 15:28
|
|
Posts: 1,034 |
Thanked: 784 times |
Joined on Dec 2007
@ Annapolis, MD
|
#4
|
|
2012-01-30
, 15:53
|
|
Posts: 2,448 |
Thanked: 9,523 times |
Joined on Aug 2010
@ Wigan, UK
|
#5
|
BTW, as far as I've noticed, the stock video player on the N9 does NOT support .FLV videos.
To play FLV videos on my N9, I must use mplayer.
The Following User Says Thank You to marxian For This Useful Post: | ||
|
2012-01-31
, 17:00
|
Posts: 87 |
Thanked: 66 times |
Joined on Jan 2010
@ Australia
|
#7
|
Being able to play FLV files and being able to play flash videos in the browser are two VERY different things.
WIthout a proper flash browser plugin, there's no way to get to the actual .FLV file that a web page would stream as it's usally wrapped up in some flash applet like a video player (that's what gives you your playback controls in youtube, for example).
There are several methods and desktop browser plugins that can extract the .FLV file from a flash video website. If all you needed to play flash video on the webpage was the ability to play FLV files, then these tools would not be needed.
3GPP formats (H.263), ASF, AVI, Flash Video, H.264/AVC, Matroska, MPEG-4, VC-1, WMV 9, XVID
As far as I knew the N9 "harmattan" video player support FLV but the browser doesn't show these videos?? is there anyway to run videos from the browser directly ? different bowsers maybe? or a bowsers plug-in to do that??
did anyone try if the default player able to run videos from the web? "buffering"? or any others
What about the new update 1.2 with the webkit 2.2 does it support such a thing? or shall we fill a bug ?
thanks, and sorry for my poor explanation!!