Am Freitag, 8. Juni 2018 schrieb William Morder:
Okay, now this is new: In k3b settings, under external programs, both sox and
eMovix are listed as not found. I don't know about eMovix, as I can't find
any packages that mention it, but sox is definitely installed; yet k3b
persists in telling me that sox is not found.
And here's another disconcerting detail. When I click on search path (still in
k3b settings), I find that /opt/trinity/bin/ is not listed as a search path,
but something called /opt/schily/bin/ *is listed*; I've looked round, but
there is nothing I can find that corresponds to schily. Moreover, I delete
the line to search the path for /opt/schily/bin/, and add the
path /opt/trinity/bin/, yet when I restart I find that trinity is no longer
there, but schily has returned.
Apparently schily (or something related to it) is somehow connected to this
problem. Also it seems that I need whatever schily provides (cdrkit,
cdrtools, etc.), so for the time being, I've put this line back in for the
search path. However, this schily seems to the a controversial topic:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:List_of_software_forks
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Cdrkit
What the *$?%!&~ is schily? It seems to refer to a person named Joerg
Schilling (see links above). In any case, I have no folders named schily, so
the path points to nowhere that I can find in my system.
Bill
You found the right guy :-) Ages ago Schily was the autor of THE linux cd burning
software. But then he changed then licence of his programs, the world was about to end,
but people forked the software which led to "wodim" and the world continued
turning. Anyway, "/opt/schily/bin" is hardcoded in k3d, you find it in
"/opt/trinity/lib/libk3b.so.3".
"sox" is not found on my system, too, despite the fact that sox is /usr/bin/sox
and /usr/bin is included in the search path. It's no use fiddling the configfile,
"sox" is simply ignored. But I don't know why k3b would need sox?
"eMoviex" is ancient, too. Ages ago you could build a CD/DVD and include eMovix
"bootloader" which contained a minimal linux system. Boot from the CD/DVD and
you were able to play the video content of the media ... omg, wasn't it around just
yesterday? Well, follow the trail in the dust:
http://movix.sourceforge.net/Docs/eMoviX/
http://movix.sourceforge.net/
Nik
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