![]() “Twitch Leecher” seems to be a good program for this but I don’t see a linux version. works ok but only downloads ~1gig/1hr chunks at a time. The detailed by-minute chart and more information about Twitch viewers is located here.The live streaming data can be found at the links: unique streamers, concurrent channels, overall stream time. Same for even though they both say they support twitch. This chart shows the change in Twitch viewership over almost the entire time of its existence. It was staying on “processing” for a really long time. “python-pip” can’t be found, but it installs python2-pip instead.Īnd after installing livestreamer, when I put in: The only tabs/windows/options available in the program are “Channels” “Follows” “Games”, which only seem to let you browse what ever is live under those categories.įor this one: sudo zypper install python-pip It looks like you might only be able to watch/browse live channels. You can’t paste in VOD URLs, and I couldn’t even find the channel of the person who’s VOD I was looking for. You can select one or more files on the Files tab, select a CD or DVD on the Disc tab, or even capture video from a specific device on the Capture Device tab. In the Open Media dialog, select the media you want to stream. The gnome-twitch program is pretty limited. To start broadcasting a network stream, click the Media menu in VLC and select Stream. ![]() We will show you in simple steps how to do it exactly. Just for anyone else who finds this thread with similar issues: If you want to watch the Streaming service in the VLC Player, you need to make various settings and Changes. You can get it from the multimedia:apps repo zypper ar -f Livestreamer “paste twitch url here” best -o mystream.mp4 Regardin you should be able to do it in opensuse with a few changes (just replace apt-get install with zypper install) sudo zypper install python-pip Going to try using for now since I’m still not getting consistent quality from twitch.Īs this is a different issue maybe a new thread is a better choice Read the greasyfork page for more info, I still thing h264ify is your best choiceĬan’t edit my posts but just came across this link for command line instructions for linux that I wanted to add to the thread, but I’m guessing it won’t work for opensuse: Under Firefox install Tampermonkey (Greasemonkey hasn’t been ported to webext but might work) There was a way to use vlc in youtube but that requires you to use a script manager and inject a user script ![]() I don’t recommend this as it will break other sites that don’t offer an alternative In about:config find and set the preference to false Go to VLC Media>Open network stream and paste the url there and click play.-Done I use firefox but it should be similar for the chrome. ![]() You can try and force youtube to give you mp4 (h264) video Youtube defaults to webm (vp9 and vp8 video) under linux ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
Details
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |