

It works with X11, Xv, DGA, OpenGL, SVGAlib, fbdev, AAlib, libca‐ca, DirectFB, Quartz, Mac OS X CoreVideo, but you can also use GGI, SDL (and all their drivers), VESA (on every VESA-compatible card, even without X11), some low-level card-specific drivers (for Matrox, 3dfx and ATI) and some hardware MPEG decoder boards, such as the Siemens DVB, Hauppauge PVR (IVTV), DXR2 and DXR3/Hollywood+. MPlayer supports a wide range of video and audio output drivers. You can watch VCD, SVCD, DVD, Blu-ray, 3ivx, DivX 3/4/5, WMV and even H.264 movies, too. It plays most MPEG/VOB, AVI, ASF/WMA/WMV, RM, QT/MOV/MP4, Ogg/OGM, MKV, VIVO, FLI, NuppelVideo, yuv4mpeg, FILM and RoQ files, supported by many native and binary codecs. Mplayer is a movie player for Linux although it runs on many other platforms and CPU architectures. The Mplayer, when used with its GUI variant insead of the CLI, has the following features: We have run the commands and procedures mentioned in this article on a Ubuntu 18.04 LTS system Installing the mplayer utility The real capability of the mplayer In this article, we will explain how you can install the mplayer through your command line and then watch an. Thus, this trick is not what you can rely on but try once in a while-just for fun. I tried the trick with various videos and came to the conclusion that only some animated cartoon movies could be watched and fairly interpreted in the Linux command line. It is the mplayer application he had used to do so which only plays videos in ASCII format-so obviously they seem very low resolution and barely watchable. If he had said ‘through’ the Terminal, it was not a big deal, but how he played them inside the Terminal is what intrigued us. A friend mentioned that he has played videos “in” the Terminal. It boiled down to what is the most geekiest or Terminal-savvy thing we have ever done with our command line. So yesterday, me and some geek friends were sitting and discussing the power of the Linux Terminal application.
