On Tuesday 28 July 2009 09:24:51 Anne Wilson wrote: > On Tuesday 28 July 2009 01:56:37 suvayu ali wrote: > > 2009/7/27 David Boles <dgboles@xxxxxxxxxxx>: > > >>>> On Monday 27 July 2009 16:32:32 David Boles wrote: > > >>>>> I have a friend that perched herself on a plinth in Trafalgar > > >>>>> Square as part of a 'live sculpture' project. > > >>>>> > > >>>>> The streaming video is Flash. And the videos are archived can be > > >>>>> viewed later. > > >>>>> > > >>>>> She want to show this to her mother but her mother has no computer > > >>>>> to view it with. Nothing that I have tried will capture the video. > > >>>>> > > >>>>> Video located here: > > >>>>> http://www.oneandother.co.uk/participants/Margot > > > > <.....> > > > > > None of those are actual URLs to the video. Of all of these the largest > > > was 160k. I doubt that a full hour of audio and video would be that > > > small. ;-) > > > > I think you are misjudging the situation. The stream seems to be a > > live stream. If that is the case, then there is _no_ file. The only > > way to grab something like that would be with a script using mplayer > > or vlc. I don't know how to do that, but that seems to be the only > > possible solution. I think someone posted an mplayer script to do > > something like this a few months back, but in that case it was _not_ a > > flash stream. Maybe the archives will help you here. > > That's ringing bells. Before people started writing plugins to capture > youtube video I remember that someone wrote about identifying the temporary > file that is created, and saving that. Unfortunately I can't remember the > details, so I hope this will remind someone with a better memory. That's the easiest trick in the book --- when you click to play a YouTube video, the browser downloads the data in /tmp directory with a name of the type Flash<something> (eg. FlashSjfdEf or such). You simply watch the download progress indicator below the picture, and once it is completed, pause the movie, go to /tmp directory and "cp Flash* ~" to get it in your home directory. Later on you can play it in mplayer or so. This technique is very easy and Just Works, I use it on a daily basis. Of course, you might happen to have more than one Flash* file in /tmp, but I typically copy them all, and later on examine which one I need. Not sure if this will work for the OP, though. HTH, :-) Marko -- fedora-list mailing list fedora-list@xxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe: https://www.redhat.com/mailman/listinfo/fedora-list Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Communicate/MailingListGuidelines