Chapter 4. Playing Music and Video
IN THIS CHAPTER
Legal issues with digital media
Using commercial content on Linux
Playing, recording, and ripping music
Setting up TV and audio cards
Recording and ripping music
Watching TV
Videoconferencing
Watching movies and videos
Storing and displaying images from digital cameras
One of the most popular and enjoyable activities on a computer is playing audio and video. With improved multimedia players and tools for storing and managing content, Linux has become a great platform for storing, playing, and managing your music and video files.
In this chapter, you learn to use the sound, video, digital imaging, and other multimedia tools available for Linux. You explore the process of configuring audio and video devices, and examine the kinds of media formats available for the Linux platform, how they work, and how to make the most of them by using the right applications.
Linux is an excellent platform for taking advantage of widely used formats such as MPEG, AVI, OGG, and QuickTime. A wide variety of players are available for the various formats, and this chapter discusses several of them to help you determine which might be the right one (or combination) for your interests and/or needs.
Note
Because many devices holding multimedia content are removable (CDs, DVDs, digital cameras, Webcams, and so on), recent features in Linux to automatically handle removable hardware and media have greatly improved the Linux desktop experience. See the section on managing ...
Get Linux® Bible 2009 Edition: Boot up Ubuntu®, Fedora®, KNOPPIX, Debian®, SUSE®, and 13 Other Distributions now with the O’Reilly learning platform.
O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.