Hi,
+ video scaling
+ you've implemented the hard-coded 50% / 100% / 200%
zooming nicely; but we need 'scaling' (IMHO this
should be the default)
Seems like I have fixed.
+ be more ideal to have a black vs. a grey background
too where the video is smaller than the window,
I still find a place where this color is changed...
+ mis-placing windows on F9 presentation
+ I load flying-boy.odp and get a grey window
mis-aligned with the video:
http://www.gnome.org/~michael/vlc1.png
Seems like I have fixed it too.
which is odd, drawing a rectangle around the scaled
video and then hitting presenting mode shows:
Could you add more detail about how to reproduce it?
Minh
Minh Ngo | minh@fedoraproject.org | Principal Lazy Engineer | The Document
Foundation
On 16 September 2013 12:47, Michael Meeks <michael.meeks@collabora.com>wrote:
Hi Minh,
First - thanks for all the fixes :-)
On Sat, 2013-09-14 at 22:47 +0300, Minh Ngo wrote:
+ audio during keyframe capture
+ intermittent play in a separate window
Generally fixed. How could I manipulate with a video (stop/play) in
the full screen mode?
Great; so from our IRC conversation, here are the remaining bugs /
issues that I can see:
+ video scaling
+ you've implemented the hard-coded 50% / 100% / 200%
zooming nicely; but we need 'scaling' (IMHO this
should be the default)
+ be more ideal to have a black vs. a grey background
too where the video is smaller than the window,
http://www.gnome.org/~michael/vlc1.png
+ mis-placing windows on F9 presentation
+ I load flying-boy.odp and get a grey window
mis-aligned with the video:
http://www.gnome.org/~michael/vlc1.png
which is odd, drawing a rectangle around the scaled
video and then hitting presenting mode shows:
http://www.gnome.org/~michael/vlc3.png
seems like the video is correctly positioned, albeit
not scaled (cf. above) but that other X window is
mis-positioned.
+ Projecting video
Of course the primary use of video is to project it.
Unfortunately, we're not getting the display / screen
right for the multi-head presentation mode: ie. plug a
VGA into your laptop, and don't clone the monitors:
http://www.gnome.org/~michael/vlc4.png
In theory we should have two concurrent displays of the
video, one on each screen (when that is requested),
although having just one on the presentation screen is
fine too.
Otherwise, this starts to look & behave quite well :-) naturally
this
needs testing on Windows too (which is the primary platform for this),
but this is encouraging progress.
Thanks Minh !
Michael.
--
michael.meeks@collabora.com <><, Pseudo Engineer, itinerant idiot
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