LATEST NEWS

















ESSAYS










MPlayerhq.hu - The Movie Player For Linux



the movie player for Linux - official site





Interview with Arpi

This is an as-is extraction of the interview posted on the Hungarian Unix Portal on 2001.11.16 and copied here with the permission of the original author, trey. It was translated to English by Gabucino.

I've already written numerous articles on this site about MPlayer. In one of them I claimed it's the fastest, most usable MOVIE player for Linux/Unix. It's also famous, known in every single corner of the world (not joking). In my latest article I also wrote that - according to me - more people know it abroad than in Hungary. I think we Hungarians should be proud of the projects which gain us fame all around the globe. Thus I decided to make an interview with the creator and main programmer of MPlayer, Árpád Gereöffy (A'rpi). I've asked him about quite some topics: GPL, MPlayer's history, development, etc.

Let's see:

UP:
When did you start programming? Where did the idea to write a MOVIE player come from?
A'rpi:
These are two questions :)
  1. Well that was a long time ago, at my age of 10, on c64 :). (Like Pontscho, but he had vic20). I've got bored with the games quickly, and started to write miscellaneous things, of course not big stuff like MPlayer... I've been unsatisfied with ready things even at that time, and wanted to rewrite everything. After all, this is what keeps Linux alive, and evolving. Everyone touches into the programs, which in turn gets better.
  2. The idea came a year ago. Somebody lent me a VCD, and - needless to say -, neither of the current players could cope with it. I wasn't satisfied with mpegtv anyways, and that was the only working mpeg player available at that time. So I stayed with the well-working method: let's rewrite one :) My victim was XMPS, I've spent a lot of time (1 week :)) fixing bugs, and at the end I realized that the codec (SMPEG) was bad, so all is in vain. Plan "B": let's write one. You know what happened :)
UP:
Who develops MPlayer? Who are the team members, and what their tasks are?
A'rpi:
Well that's a complicated question. As with the opensource projects in general, this one also has much (several hundred!) developers, most of them submit only few line fixes, but those are also very helpful! I would split the "team" to 3 parts: core members - this is their main project, spending most of their free time on MPlayer, the contributors who send patches, developing smaller parts of the code, and the "outsiders" who don't have anything to do with MPlayer, but write libs which we use, and which are essential in out progress. The developers' list is available in the documentation, so I'd just outline the most active core members here:
  • Gabucino - documentation and homepage maintainer and translator, user-whacker, IRC admin, morale decreaser, and the winner of the face compo, btw :)
  • Pontscho - GUI hacker, master of the CVS :)
  • LGB - rewrite-o-maniac Debian + GPL fan, part-time DVD store :)
  • Szabi - parser generator :)
  • Atmos - SDL fan, windows porter :)
  • Nick Kurshev & Michael Niedermayer - MMX/3DNow/SSE gurus, mostly they are responsible for MPlayer's speed
UP:
Strange that although most of the team and even you are hungarians, you are very rare to be heard from in Hungary. What could be the reason?
A'rpi:
Maybe because we aren't politics, and we have nothing in common with the oil case :)
But seriously: MPlayer is a pretty new program (1 years old), people have just started using it, and this is the first big project for most of us - apart from the demoscene. We mailed some forums, newspapers (like CHIP), but nobody bothered. Now all of them want interviews... On the other hand, even most of the users don't know that it's from Hungary. The reason for this is maybe that we propagate the program, not us :)
UP:
There are multiple MOVIE players for Linux/Unix, like for example Xine. What makes MPlayer differ from the other players?
A'rpi:
Well a year ago my answer would just be: this one works. This one year was very active in linux multimedia, a lot of players have born from nearly nothing, and then disappeared according to the laws of the evolution. Either of the players still actively maintained are good, but each of them has its bias on different things. The speciality of MPlayer is running in one process. Many people think this is a Bad Thing, but they can't deny that it works, and gives greater performance than the concurrent players, like xine of avifile. Also the audio & video synchronizing code is special, when I coded this, neither of the current players cared about it. This has changed now, but bugreports like "the audio was synced only with MPlayer" are frequent even now. Nowadays we grew above the other players in supported platforms, output devices, and fileformats.
UP:
What are your plans with MPlayer? What new features are you working on now?
A'rpi:
Plans? World domination. :)
We are developing three big things now: TV cards' support (so MPlayer will be usable also for TV watching, using the supported output devices). Mostly Alex is working on this. The other is the MEncoder. This is a converter/encoder program. The reason for it is the same as for MPlayer: there is no stable, working linux/unix encoder with proper A/V sync. Now there is, or will be.
The third is a bit dark area, namely the support of windows quicktime plugins. The development is proceeding pretty slowly, and we don't even see 50% chance for success, but the crossover plugin showed it's possible, so we won't give up either.
And the documentation will also be rewritten, as always :)
UP:
Where can the MPlayer users go with their problems? Is there an on-line forum or iRC channel where they can get help?
A'rpi:
On IRC there is the #mplayer channel, but it's a very "lonely" place as far as I know. If the user wants fast and usable answer, I recommend reading the appropriate documentation (bugreports.html), and then writing to the mplayer-users mailing list. Neither us, or the other recipients of the list like questions already answered in the documentation, so those usually get RTFM answers. The documentation is very good, and continually extended according to user questions, thus in case of problems it's a must-read! The list's language is english by the way, because there hasn't been much requests for a hungarian list.
UP:
Is it possible for someone would like to join the development, or is it closed?
A'rpi:
Not at all closed. Anyone can send patches, of course according to the rules (see tech documentation), and if we checked it's fine, we commit it. After more good patches the submitter is offered the CVS write, though often we felt sorry for this afterwards.
UP:
I heard you hate the GPL. Could you explain the reason?
A'rpi:
The reason is: Gabucino ;)
The "hate" is a bit harsh, let's just say I don't agree with it. Why? The GPL doesn't allow using non-GPL licensed codes in GPL programs. This gives us big bother, because half the code is GPL, the other half is not. Last time the kernel was giving such problems, because starting with (I think) 2.4.10 all the drivers had to be GPL. This is pissing off developers (many hardware manufacturers just can't release the source, due to license of used technologies) and users (they can't compile such drivers into the kernel, only module).
UP:
Something was removed from the MPlayer homepage. It was about the gcc 2.96 and was removed due to RedHat's request. Could you explain this?
A'rpi:
We've been asked what our problem is with gcc 2.96 (mainly because such version does not exist, at least not on GNU site, and it compiles broken code in numerous ocassions, or doesn't compile at all). We got bored with answering so we rather wrote a section about this into the documentation, and part of this went to the homepage as well. RedHat didn't like it though, they said we decrease their reputation and we can be sued for it :(
UP:
I saw there was a window$ port of MPlayer. Many people didn't like it, could you tell me about this?
A'rpi:
This was only for a joke, we don't intend to release or continue it. Atmos was too bored on an afternoon, and he messed and messed with cygwin and objdump until he got a minimal MPlayer compile on windows. It was unusable as there was no optimized code in it, but worth to take a screenshot ;)
UP:
In the latest version the MPlayer has a GUI. Did it went in on user request or will this always be implemented?
A'rpi:
It was done on users' nagging, and of course we'll develop it further. It's worth to check the skins, some of them can concur with windows players.
UP:
How much are you interested in users questions?
A'rpi:
Barely. Interesting questions are asked very rarely because those things are already implemented, or still have technical reasons for being not. For lame ones we answer: ok, write it and send the patch. Then either someone writes it, or it's forgotten :)
A'rpi / Astral & ESP-team

So this was the interview, thanks to A'rpi for it, particularly for the quick response ( I wrote the mail at 22pm, I got the answer at 1am =] ). I hope this helped spreading MPlayer. I'll be announcing the new features of this project as before.





ALTERNATIVE PAGE LOOKS

design7 design5 design4 design3
AWARDS WON

Linux New Media Award 2003 HUP Reader's Choice Award 2003 Softonic Multimedia Award 2003 LinuxQuestions.org Members Choice Award

site maintainer:
Diego Biurrun

spanish site maintainer:
Juan Martín

code maintainer:
Alex Beregszaszi

documentation maintainer:
Diego Biurrun

site design by:
mechanik fiveonetwo



© 2000-2004 The MPlayer Project