2015-05-17, 14:54
(2015-05-15, 18:53)bromix Wrote: Version 5.1.2 (2015-05-15)
ADD: ask for video quality (optional)
You may have just opened up the way for quality selections in this.
(2015-05-15, 18:53)bromix Wrote: Version 5.1.2 (2015-05-15)
ADD: ask for video quality (optional)
(2015-05-17, 14:54)cambax Wrote:(2015-05-15, 18:53)bromix Wrote: Version 5.1.2 (2015-05-15)
ADD: ask for video quality (optional)
You may have just opened up the way for quality selections in this.
(2015-05-17, 14:56)bromix Wrote: Won't help and has nothing to with it....DASH is a complete different story....you need 2 streams instead of one. Also I don't read the adaptive streams.
(2015-05-17, 15:00)cambax Wrote:(2015-05-17, 14:56)bromix Wrote: Won't help and has nothing to with it....DASH is a complete different story....you need 2 streams instead of one. Also I don't read the adaptive streams.
The support for reading the manifests already exists, as does the support for playing an audio track not present in the video track (to a degree.) Eventually I hope to see the two combined with your addon and included in a menu like this. If you're uninterested, feel free to post on the linked thread so no one wastes their time.
(2015-05-17, 15:07)bromix Wrote: Again...the addon doesn't do the muxxing of streams. An addon only provides the content (in this case the url of the streams). But I already know the other thread and it tells the same story
(2015-05-17, 15:23)cambax Wrote:(2015-05-17, 15:07)bromix Wrote: Again...the addon doesn't do the muxxing of streams. An addon only provides the content (in this case the url of the streams). But I already know the other thread and it tells the same story
You don't seem to understand the thread as much as you think. You already get video URLs from YouTube and pass them to Kodi. What I'm suggesting is that you be open to incorporating otherwise useless work that has been done to list video and audio URLs from a DASH manifest (this would need to be done in Python and would be best done by people experienced with a single service provider as everyone uses their own implementation) and get two (a video and an audio) to pass to Kodi instead of just one.
Nowhere are you being expected to modify the media. Just parse XML (using existing code), offer the user a selection menu (or defaults), and pass two (instead of one) URLs to a Kodi installation which supports playing separate video and audio files at the same time (which exists.) This is the story the thread tells