On 26/09/10 05:39, Marko Vojinovic wrote: > On Sun, Sep 26, 2010 at 11:19 AM, Bob Goodwin<bobgoodwin@xxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: >> On 25/09/10 23:35, Bill Davidsen wrote: >>> Bob Goodwin wrote: >>>> This computer runs F-13 and XFCE. >>>> >>>> I have two "IP cameras" that provide video streams that I would like >>>> to make available in one corner of this wide screen monitor. I can >>>> view both cameras using either Firefox or VLC, I normally just click >>>> on an icon that brings up the desired camera in VLC but it would be >>>> convenient if I could elect to put a small image in one corner and >>>> keep it there when required, as when waiting for someone to come in >>>> the driveway, e.g. >>>> >>>> Can anyone suggest a means of doing that? >>>> >>> I just drop the vlc to 1/4 size with the drop down menu (there's a shortcut, >>> don't remember it offhand) and then drag and drop the window. I'm probably >>> missing something, that's the way I watch TV (HDhomerun capture). >>> >> >> Why didn't I think of that earlier? It's not precisely what I >> would like but it definitely works! It requires more >> manipulation than simply clicking on an icon but that's no >> different than a lot of stuff I do ... >> >> It reproduces the entire VLC window with all the trimmings, all >> I actually need is the video image, and oddly I can't reduce the >> window width smaller than a certain size, while vertically it >> can be closed down to nothing? It can be set as "always on top." >> Clicking on "full-screen" immediately switches to a 23" wide >> display of the video image only with a small tool bar at the >> bottom, a usable feature certainly. >> >> I had hoped to make it use a little less screen area than it >> does but this is certainly one solution to my problem. >> >> Thanks. >> >> Bob >> > Why don't you just use mplayer? Something like > > mplayer -vf scale=64:48 -ontop yourvideostream > > or similar. You can put it whereever you want, the only thing that > gets displayed is the video window (no overhead with controls etc.), > you can scale it to any width:height you wish, toogle the fullscreen > just by hitting f on the keyboard, and so on. > > In general mplayer is the most powerful video player when it comes to > custom stuff... > > :-) > Marko Neither mplayer or totem will display the mjpeg video stream? It was suggested that a codec could be obtained from http://www.mplayerhq.hu/MPlayer/releases/codecs/. I found an rpm there, installed it but to no avail. I probably should investigate mplayer further ... -- users mailing list users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe or change subscription options: https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/users Guidelines: http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Mailing_list_guidelines