Netflix just sent an email saying DVD service will end
in late September, 2023. The obvious nudge is to start
streaming. It appears that one uses a browser, on the Pi
it'd probably be chromium, as the viewer. That's sort of
OK for YouTube, but I'm a little skeptical for Netflix.
Netflix just sent an email saying DVD service will end
in late September, 2023. The obvious nudge is to start
streaming. It appears that one uses a browser, on the Pi
it'd probably be chromium, as the viewer. That's sort of
OK for YouTube, but I'm a little skeptical for Netflix.
Any thoughts on how well it'd work, and how the streaming
catalog compares to the DVD catalog (which has dwindled
hugely since the good old days)?
Thanks for reading,
bob prohaska
Netflix uses Widevine DRM. It can be installed for Chromium on the rPi
using:
sudo apt install libwidevinecdm0
On a rPi3 it is unwatchable. I've not tested on a rPi4. On an Orange Pi
5 it works fine, to a point.
The gotcha with Widevine on Netflix/Amazon Prime is that Widevine has
various security levels, L1,L2,L3. On Linux/Chromium it is not possible
to achieve the highest security level. This has the consequence that
services like Netflix and Amazon Prime limit the quality of video
streams. In Amazon Prime, streams are limited to 1.2 GB per hour, as
opposed to the normal 6 GB per hour. This means video quality is
inferior, particularly in terms of contrast.
On the bright side, I do have a docker compose file to enable
downloading Torrents over VPN. That provides a much, superior watching experience.
Pancho <Pancho.Jones@proton.me> wrote:
Sounds like it's worth a try. My display is an old 720p Panasonic
Netflix uses Widevine DRM. It can be installed for Chromium on the rPi
using:
sudo apt install libwidevinecdm0
On a rPi3 it is unwatchable. I've not tested on a rPi4. On an Orange Pi
5 it works fine, to a point.
The gotcha with Widevine on Netflix/Amazon Prime is that Widevine has
various security levels, L1,L2,L3. On Linux/Chromium it is not possible
to achieve the highest security level. This has the consequence that
services like Netflix and Amazon Prime limit the quality of video
streams. In Amazon Prime, streams are limited to 1.2 GB per hour, as
opposed to the normal 6 GB per hour. This means video quality is
inferior, particularly in terms of contrast.
plasma display, so maybe the image quality won't matter so much.
On the bright side, I do have a docker compose file to enable
downloading Torrents over VPN. That provides a much, superior watching
experience.
I'm a bit unclear how that works, could you explain or offer links
to more details? I'd be using a Netflix account, not Amazon.
On 19/04/2023 19:37, bob prohaska wrote:
Pancho <Pancho.Jones@proton.me> wrote:
Sounds like it's worth a try. My display is an old 720p Panasonic
Netflix uses Widevine DRM. It can be installed for Chromium on the rPi
using:
sudo apt install libwidevinecdm0
On a rPi3 it is unwatchable. I've not tested on a rPi4. On an Orange Pi
5 it works fine, to a point.
The gotcha with Widevine on Netflix/Amazon Prime is that Widevine has
various security levels, L1,L2,L3. On Linux/Chromium it is not possible
to achieve the highest security level. This has the consequence that
services like Netflix and Amazon Prime limit the quality of video
streams. In Amazon Prime, streams are limited to 1.2 GB per hour, as
opposed to the normal 6 GB per hour. This means video quality is
inferior, particularly in terms of contrast.
plasma display, so maybe the image quality won't matter so much.
Yes, give it a go. I normally find 720p good enough definition, my
criticism of the Widevine limitation was more to do with colours/contrast.
FWIW I'm thinking of getting a new LCD TV, just to say money on
electricity, 20 to 30 pennies a day soon adds up to a new TV.
On the bright side, I do have a docker compose file to enable
downloading Torrents over VPN. That provides a much, superior watching
experience.
I'm a bit unclear how that works, could you explain or offer links
to more details? I'd be using a Netflix account, not Amazon.
It means it is easier to set up and better quality to pirate TV, for
free, than it is to pay via a streaming platform such as Netflix or Amazon.
It means it is easier to set up and better quality to pirate TV, for
free, than it is to pay via a streaming platform such as Netflix or Amazon.
Don't VPN services cost cash money? A legit no-ads Netflix account is only $10/mo. That's not much, at least these days....
On 20/04/2023 17:53, bob prohaska wrote:
It means it is easier to set up and better quality to pirate TV, forDon't VPN services cost cash money? A legit no-ads Netflix account is only >> $10/mo. That's not much, at least these days....
free, than it is to pay via a streaming platform such as Netflix or Amazon. >>
I have Amazon Prime, for about $10 a month, which I've had for years. >Recently I changed my HTPC for an orange Pi, I put a lot of effort into >getting Amazon Prime Video to work at all, now it works, but badly.
For other reasons, I use a VPN service, for privacy, to limit government >snooping. It cost buttons, $2-$3 a month. I originally got Amazon Prime >because BBC was blocked due to the VPN. So I stopped paying for the BBC.
It just seems strange that companies cripple their streaming platforms
to stop piracy, while at the same time piracy is simpler than using
their platforms at all. What is the point?
Presumably it has some economic value, it just seems strange.
I have Amazon Prime, for about $10 a month, which I've had for years. Recently I changed my HTPC for an orange Pi, I put a lot of effort into getting Amazon Prime Video to work at all, now it works, but badly.
Pancho <Pancho.Jones@proton.me> wrote:
I have Amazon Prime, for about $10 a month, which I've had for years.
Recently I changed my HTPC for an orange Pi, I put a lot of effort into
getting Amazon Prime Video to work at all, now it works, but badly.
Which model of Orange Pi, and under what OS? I recently obtained an Orange Pi 5 and put Android on it. Prime Video runs like a champ on it...more responsive than any of the Fire TV sticks I have.
On 21/04/2023 16:13, scott@alfter.diespammersdie.us wrote:
Which model of Orange Pi, and under what OS? I recently obtained an Orange >> Pi 5 and put Android on it. Prime Video runs like a champ on it...more
responsive than any of the Fire TV sticks I have.
Which version/download of Android?
Do you get full quality Prime Video 6GB/hour?
Pancho <Pancho.Jones@proton.me> wrote:
On 21/04/2023 16:13, scott@alfter.diespammersdie.us wrote:
Which model of Orange Pi, and under what OS? I recently obtained an Orange >>> Pi 5 and put Android on it. Prime Video runs like a champ on it...more
responsive than any of the Fire TV sticks I have.
Which version/download of Android?
Whichever version was available for download a couple of weeks ago...think it's based on Android 12, which is newer than what's on my phone. :)
Do you get full quality Prime Video 6GB/hour?
I don't know and I don't know where I'd look.
SiriusXM, and YouTube (via Invidious) than Prime Video. It's plugged into a 55" TV, and I have no complaints about video quality.
On 23/04/2023 05:29, scott@alfter.diespammersdie.us wrote:
TBH, it's used more for Plex,Is that at 4K?
SiriusXM, and YouTube (via Invidious) than Prime Video. It's plugged into a >> 55" TV, and I have no complaints about video quality.
We got the discs for years. I loved it. But then they started
cutting back on their stock. It got to where everything I
wanted to see was unavailable. The streaming has gone
downhill the same way. And of course, the streaming selection
never was very good. I often just can't find anything that
I want to see. I get more DVDs from the local library than
movies on Netflix. It's mostly crap, dumb TV series, Korean
TV (?)... whatever they can get cheap. Plus their own
productions, which are mostly crap.
"bob prohaska" <bp@www.zefox.net> wrote
| I may try streaming, but am much less sure than I was.
|
Another option, if you live someplace with a good library, is
two other services: Hoopla and Kanopy.
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