Reco wrote:
> Nope. It was /usr/lib32 (notice the absence of 'x') that became
> /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu.
> /usr/lib/x32 should've become /usr/lib/x32-linux-gnu.
>
Ah you are absolutely right it was lib32
> But, nobody is interested in it, so it's dead for all intents and
> purposes.
Thanks God
Hi.
On Thu, Oct 04, 2018 at 07:56:29PM +0200, deloptes wrote:
> Jonathan Dowland wrote:
>
> > /usr/libx32 might be related to the x32 architecture port - which is
> > something different to i386 or amd64 and almost certainly not relevant
> > to solving this problem.
>
> which port?
A ve
Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> /usr/libx32 might be related to the x32 architecture port - which is
> something different to i386 or amd64 and almost certainly not relevant
> to solving this problem.
which port?
I am pretty sure this directory was removed in favor
of /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/, so it s
On Thu, Oct 04, 2018 at 08:25:02AM +0200, deloptes wrote:
don't know your setup, but /usr/libx32 does not exist since or after
wheezy - I don't recall when exactly it was replaced
by /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/ for the sake of multi-arch.
/usr/libx32 might be related to the x32 architecture port -
Bob McGowan wrote:
> One question does remain, why didn't apt-get refuse to install the
> application, or pull in the correct library?
don't know your setup, but /usr/libx32 does not exist since or after
wheezy - I don't recall when exactly it was replaced
by /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/ for the sake
Thank you both for pointing to the correct library. I will be trying it
out soon, as time permits.
One question does remain, why didn't apt-get refuse to install the
application, or pull in the correct library?
On 10/2/18 11:29 PM, deloptes wrote:
Bob McGowan wrote:
Hi,
I have a high def
Bob McGowan wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a high def (4K) mp4 video I would like to put on a Blu-Ray disk,
> to play in a standard Blu-Ray player.
>
> So I did the Google search and found several posts, all of which
> mentioned an application tsMuxeR, which is available for Linux and is in
> the Debia
On 10/02/2018 09:02 PM, Bob McGowan wrote:
Hi,
I have a high def (4K) mp4 video I would like to put on a Blu-Ray disk,
to play in a standard Blu-Ray player.
So I did the Google search and found several posts, all of which
mentioned an application tsMuxeR, which is available for Linux and is
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