Flash video problems never end
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A Former User last edited by
Well, I like Opera. Is fast and gas a great bookmark tab system, much better than Google Chrome and is much faster that Firefox. But damn it, Why in heck can't I see CNN videos? Why do I get a black Screen with the "UNDEFINED info: The browser does not allow you to watch this video. ....."?
I am using Ubuntu Linux 16.10 and have installed the flashpepper plugin with either the Synaptic Manager option and de Adobe Pepper Player instruction. The phoniest thing is that it works in some machines and nor in others with exactly the same OS. YouTube works great and sites such as ABCnews work too. CNN videos work under Firefox or Google Chrome in the same machine.CAN ANYBODY HELP???
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huwanhsin last edited by admin
https://forums.opera.com/topic/19672/solved-can-t-view-cnn-video-on-linux/7
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brumman last edited by
Yes opera has become a real pain with this ongoing video problem. I had to role back to the last working stable system (42 .xxx) but finally decided that by now the latest version 44 would probably be fixed! Some hopes eh? I do like opera but this is ridiculous, I would use Vivaldi but it has dependency issues with my Ubuntu version so got to wait until I install Ubuntu 16. Is this all the result of the Chinese take over?
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huwanhsin last edited by
Hi! Bruman. Frankly speaking, this flash problem occurred long before the Chinese take Opera over. Maybe Opera doesn't value the users of Opera Linux.
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A Former User last edited by admin
@tastymineraler I couldn't agree more. I made a rather extensive summary of the problem here. I must say that I've been really patient with opera, and still given it the third, fourth, and fifth chances instead of just switching to Chromium directly.
Well, if you take a look at the summary I linked to you, there you will find in one place all the different voodoo tricks that you can try in order to fix the problem. I also organized the proposals in four distinctive sections. For me, the option number one did the trick. The recipe in short goes as follows (the instructions how to run the code is given in the other thread as well):
1. Install pepperflash-nonfreeplugin (and purge all the others) 2. Install the necessary Chrome libs for H.264/MP4 codec 3. Boot your system 4. Volah!
I hope this helps to fix your problem. Cheers!
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cybrsaylr last edited by
jayaguru-shishya thanks for the above info.
However wondering if you or someone has the code for doing that so it can be done in a Terminal? -
A Former User last edited by admin
someone has the code for doing that so it can be
@cybrsaylr Hi! The code is behind the thread I linked. Well, what the heck, I'll just put it here for you:
sudo apt-get install chromium-codecs-ffmpeg-extra sudo mkdir /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/opera/lib_extra/ sudo ln -s /usr/lib/chromium-browser/libs/libffmpeg.so /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/ope
I hope it works for you! Cheers!
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A Former User last edited by
I just did the latest security update and as usual, my video doesn't work. (again.) This is why I give Opera 2 stars as a browser for Linux.
I guess it's time to drop it and go back to FF. Maybe some day they'll get it together.
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trenchsol last edited by
In order to get perfect video playback on Slackware I had to do 3 things:
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Install PepperFlash
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Install extra ffmpeg codecs
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Set and export LD_LIBRARY_PATH variable to directory where ffmpeg.so is located. That should be a directory where Opera is installed. I have a script which does that and runs opera. To check if ffmpeg is found you might run:
ldd /usr/bin/opera | grep -i ffmpeg
I think there should be a man page for *nix Opera, like there is one for lynx and w3m. These issues should be described there. People should read those man pages, at least briefly. Those who can't be bothered to read man pages at all on UNIX-like operating systems should be ignored and nobody should ever reply to their posts.
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A Former User last edited by
How long have you guys had the flash problems?
@tomatoshadow2 Greetings! According to rather a vast review on the post concerning the reported flash problems with Opera[1], they have been around ever since December 2014 - at least.
For example, I was able to get Flash running again by following the instructions at the given link (case number #1), but after the latest Opera update (version 44.0.2510.1449), the problem has re-emerged. This even though the Terminal affirms the following:
chromium-codecs-ffmpeg-extra is already the newest version (58.0.3029.81-0ubuntu0.16.04.1277).
I've been rather patient with Opera on Linux, but I guess I am moving back to Chromium tonight. I wish you good luck solving your Flash problems!
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A Former User last edited by
How long have you guys had the flash problems?
It's not flash problems. It's problems with HTML5 video codecs.
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A Former User last edited by
How long have you guys had the flash problems?
It's not flash problems. It's problems with HTML5 video codecs.
@adasiko Only the Opera browser suffers from these kinds of problems while trying to run Flash content. There ain't such problems with Chromium, for example
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A Former User last edited by
How long have you guys had the flash problems? It's not flash problems. It's problems with HTML5 video codecs.
@adasiko Only the Opera browser suffers from these kinds of problems while trying to run Flash content. There ain't such problems with Chromium, for example
adasiko is right. There are absolutely no problems with flash. Check the h264 problems thread for a solution.
Post by blackikeeagle. You may need to repeat the process after Opera browser updates. -
A Former User last edited by
@ocky - I can't find any thread from blackikeagle. Where is it please ??
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A Former User last edited by admin
The thread https://forums.opera.com/topic/19394/h264-problems/6
When you want an easy solution. I'm building ffmpeg.so packages for archlinux for the different opera flavours. Since these are statically linked they should be usable on any linux distribution.
The packages can be found at http://repo.herecura.eu/
You can browse the packagelist where you should be able to find:
opera-ffmpeg-codecs-* opera-beta-ffmpeg-codecs-* opera-developer-ffmpeg-codecs-*
Most of the time the versions are the matching versions where the opera branch was based on. For developer the versions might divert a bit due to issues in the chromium source.
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A Former User last edited by
Fix video issue on Opera Browser for all Debian Linux Distributions
Ubuntu restricted extras
Manual InstallIf you are using regular, stock Ubuntu or Debian:
sudo apt-get install ubuntu-restricted-extrasIf you are using Kubuntu:
sudo apt-get install kubuntu-restricted-extrasIf you are using Xubuntu:
sudo apt-get install xubuntu-restricted-extrasIf you are using Lubuntu:
sudo apt-get install lubuntu-restricted-extras -
A Former User last edited by admin
@ocky @adasiko Did you check the link I gave[1]? Installing the suggested Chrome libs for H.264/MP4 codec does no longer work. Instead, the problem has re-emerged.
@fredyavatar Does the first one work for Ubuntu GNOME 17.04 Zasty Zepus too? As we've all heard the news, Ubuntu will transfer to the GNOME environment as a whole, and Unity desktop won't be developed anymore in the future. Therefore, I've moved to Ubuntu GNOME in advance already
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A Former User last edited by
@fredyavatar
I would like to add that the above do NOT apply to debian. There is no package named ubuntu-restricted-extras@jayaguru-shishya
All the *ubuntu-restricted-extras packages install the same stuff and they are not desktop enviroment related, so yes, it will work even if ubuntu switches to gnome.