On Thu, 2006-04-06 at 11:41 -0700, Styma, Robert E (Robert) wrote: > However the bottom line is that some new person goes through the > exercise of loading Fedora on his laptop. He is pretty proud of > himself as it went in rather nice. He goes to the store buys a DVD > puts it in the player and it won't play. When he asks for help, he > gets one answer explaining why it cannot be allowed to work and a > slightly more useful answer pointing him to detailed instructions > which assume far more know how than he has. I would like to point out that even Windows users can face the problem of not being able to play DVDs. They get a new DVD burner, it comes with OEM Nero. They go through the fun of installing it, only to find they have one program that works (the burning software), demos of other features (e.g. being able to make MP3s of their audio CDs), and a DVD player that doesn't play sound. Why's that? MPEG licensing! You've got to pay extra for that. I don't mind, so much, that Fedora can't play DVDs straight away, so long as it's not too painful to add it yourself. It's *just* another application to add. No different from installing XMMS because you don't like Rythymbox, or whatever... Having said all that, I think PCs are a damn awful way to watch a DVD. Noisy, bug prone, and a poor display (LCD or CRT VDU gamma is different from a TV set gamma, for one thing). -- (Currently running FC4, occasionally trying FC5.) Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists.