this post was submitted on 21 May 2024
13 points (93.3% liked)

KDE

5375 readers
231 users here now

KDE is an international technology team creating user-friendly free and open source software for desktop and portable computing. KDE’s software runs on GNU/Linux, BSD and other operating systems, including Windows.

Plasma 6 Bugs

If you encounter a bug, proceed to https://bugs.kde.org, check whether it has been reported.

If it hasn't, report it yourself.

PLEASE THINK CAREFULLY BEFORE POSTING HERE.

Developers do not look for reports on social media, so they will not see it and all it does is clutter up the feed.

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] Ephera@lemmy.ml 4 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Yeah. The ffplay documentation says:

FFplay is a very simple and portable media player using the FFmpeg libraries and the SDL library. It is mostly used as a testbed for the various FFmpeg APIs.

Given that, I would expect that it actually doesn't make use of GStreamer, just to really keep things as simple as possible.

From a programming perspective, it isn't really surprising that these projects have overlap. You see that quite often, that some venerable library, like ffmpeg, does a massive chunk of the grunt work and then you've got libraries like GStreamer and libmpv, which sit on top of that, and 'just' integrate it into a wider framework or tie it all together for a specific purpose.

From an outside perspective, that will make it look like they're all similar, because the core of the magic, ffmpeg, is included into all of them (I assume).
It's just more confusing here than in other projects, because each of these projects is visible to us users in some way.

[–] boredsquirrel@slrpnk.net 2 points 6 months ago

Very strange :D

Then Fedora only ships libav stuff, which is forked off ffmpeg, and only includes the free stuff. I wonder how these now work together