Dependency problems on Linux Mint
-
fherman last edited by
@fonm That probably would solve the dependency problem. But I went through the pain and suffering of the long overdue rebuilding of my workstation to upgrade both the hardware and to install Mint 20. The dependency problem didn't occur anymore.
However, even now, Opera will still not work with things like Twitch and a few other stream content formats. I still get : This video is either unavailable or not supported in this browser. (Error #4000)
I tried adding all kinds of codecs to try to solve the problem, but get the usual error code. I tried to remove ad and tracking blockers to see if that would help. Nope.
Is it too hard for the Opera" developers to test their browser against popular websites, and fix problems which I find are reported extensively for Linux installations?
I'm an end-user, not a browser developer. I've wasted way too much time on this and other issues with Opera. Except for the very good text-flow function on Android apps which works great on my tablet, Opera has no compelling reason to be used over browsers such as Firefox.
Sorry for the rant, but I've had it with Opera.
Thank you for your suggestion. --Fred
-
burnout426 Volunteer last edited by
@fherman said in Dependency problems on Linux Mint:
However, even now, Opera will still not work with things like Twitch and a few other stream content formats. I still get : This video is either unavailable or not supported in this browser. (Error #4000
Hopefully this post will help with that. Opera can't do anything about it for legal reasons.
-
A Former User last edited by
but there's no problem with every other browser
have you got a link to Opera's explanation about the legal reasons
-
A Former User last edited by
@leocg thanks for that
weird that Vivaldi (a smaller company) on Linux Mint works as expected -
burnout426 Volunteer last edited by
@u1travio1et Vivaldi is in the same boat as Opera. Vivaldi just takes the chance and includes a script that automatically fetches libffmpeg.so.
-
teddkon last edited by
I've been using Opera as a snap package with Linux Mint for several versions and it seems to work well.
-
fherman last edited by
@teddkon Yes, I tried that. I think I reported that. The problem I had was, for whatever reason, the snap installation was unable to import/use the bookmarks, passwords, etc, (of which I had a lot) from the .deb installation, so it was worthless for me. Yes it did solve some of the codec issues.
I have abandoned Opera and moved back to FireFox which has greatly improved since I use it a few years back. Plus I don't have to concern myself that Opera is now essentially owned by the ChiComs and all the dirty tricks these folks play in their cyber warfare.
-