RealPlayer on Ubuntu 8.10 & 9.04 (Intrepid & Jaunty) 64-bit Machines (AMD64)
Posted on Mon 13 April 2009 in Ubuntu • Tagged with firefox, helix player, intrepid, mozilla, plugin, realplayer, ubuntu
I recently needed to install RealPlayer and the RealPlayer mozilla firefox plugin so that I could listen to Adam & Joe's show on BBC 6 Music.
I had previously been using the mplayer mozilla plugin, and although playback worked, it was quite choppy (it didn't seem to buffer too well), and I could not pause/resume or seek.
My first thought was to look in the Medibuntu repositories, and sure enough, there was a realplayer package - unfortunately it seems that this did not include the mozilla plugin.
My next try was to look at the RealPlayer for linux website, but it only has a download for the 32-bit version. I did notice that there was a link to helix player for other platforms. Helix player is an open source media player on which RealPlayer is based. I tried helix player, but this can not play back proprietary codecs (and therefore not the real stream from the BBC website), however it did include a mozilla plugin!
I tried a combination of both - I installed RealPlayer from the Medibuntu repositories, and installed the mozilla plugin from the helix tarball to my home directory. And it works!
Instructions follow:
- Enable the Medibuntu repositories.
- Install the RealPlayer and libstdc++5 packages: sudo apt-get update && sudo apt-get install realplayer libstdc++5
- Load RealPlayer (Applications > Sound & Video > RealPlayer), and in Tools > Preferences, select the hardware tab, and set the audio driver to OSS. Press OK, and close RealPlayer.
- Download and unpack (into a temporary location) the Helix Player for AMD64 - I grabbed the linux-2.6-glibc23-amd64 tar.
- Copy the contents of the "mozilla" folder to ~/.mozilla/plugins (in your home directory - you may need to create the plugins folder).
Update: Looks as if I may have jumped the gun a bit - looking at the files installed by the medibuntu realplayer package, it does indeed look as if it comes with the mozilla plugin. I do not know why it wasn't working for me (maybe it places it in the wrong location?) - but I am running fine with the above solution (even if it is a bit messy).