Is there some Netflix app or something I can use to download movies on my laptop running Manjaro? I'll be travelling a lot and won't have wifi or anything to stream with, and I'd prefer to not have to record the screen or anything like that. Is this possible? Thanks!

I'm running GalliumOS (branch of Xubuntu) and I just realized you can't download movies from Netflix to watch offline. Is there a way around this besides making a VM with WIndows or dual booting windows?


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I think we are missing a Linux client for Netflix. You can watch Netflix via the browser but it is impossible to download movies via the website. I don't think it would be hard for them to do, it is in principle just a HTML 5 app and they could partner up with Canonical to make a Snap package. Although I don't love Snap packages, I think it's a good way for big companies to make a splash in Linux and I look specifically to Spotify, as I think the Netflix port, when realized, would be similar to the Spotify one, and it's Snap package which works fine. What are your thoughts on this?

Although the Windows version is based on Silverlight, the linux port of Silverlight (Moonlight) does not have the DRM stack that is being used (See this comment from the Moonlight lead Miguel De Icaza)

It is possible to watch netflix on Linux natively. WINE is a binary compatibility layer that natively runs windows binaries on POSIX environments such as BSD variants, Linux, and Darwin. There is a set of patches that allows you to install silverlight 4 in WINE. After this, you can install FireFox (windows version) to utilize the plugin. This will give you a browser that runs at native speed and capable of streaming netflix. Here is my reference... -to.wikia.com/wiki/How_to_watch_Netflix_(Watch_Instantly)_in_Linux

In addition certain ARM platforms have a built in hardware DRM implementation called TrustZone into the SoC design. This allows developers of ARM boards (such as mobile android devices, and Roku) to stream netflix on top of a Linux based operating system.

No, I couldn't just watch cable TV! The very idea that I watch something on a predefined schedule is not appealing to me. I'd have to spend money on a TiVo or something that records TV shows anyway. And what about DVDs and feature movies? TV shows isn't the only thing I watch, by the way. And what about shows that are not airing? how to watch older seasons? No, TV is for the weak.

Sadly, I could only find how to watch TV shows in HD, not movies. I expand on this in a section about Amazon. So, TVs are certainly for the weak, but... I eventually solved the problem by buying a big-ass TV that has enough DRM to stream all kinds of HD moving pictures. Sorry, Linux fans.

So the most rational idea is to stream movies from Internet via my desktop PC to the TV. Surprisingly, the hard thing was that I use Linux, and this was far from the usual "OMG settings are so complex in Lunupz, I can't do console!" whining.

I used to think that it was a mistake of sorts, but the further research revealed that Amazon would probably love to stream all sorts of HD stuff to as wide variety of users as possible. This looks like a matter of what publishers allowed Amazon to do. They seemingly allow HD movies to tivoized and DRM-ready devices, and just don't care that much about TV shows. Streaming the movies I tried didn't work.

To play Netflix videos offline on your computer, you need help from our Netflix Video Downloader. Netflix Video Downloader is a professional program enabling you to download unlimited TV shows, documentaries, and movies from Netflix in MP4 or MKV format. And, the downloaded Netflix videos can be transferred to any other device that supports play MP4 or MKV video files. Meanwhile, this program supports batch downloading, which allows you to add multiple videos for downloading. This professional tool will help you download videos in the queue. Besides, this tool supports downloading videos in HD resolution (up to 1080p) and keeping original audio tracks and subtitles.

I'm a Linux (archlinux) user.After the update to FF73 I cannot play Netflix movies.I can log in, see the homepage, choose a movie and then I tries for awhile to run the movie. After a while it fails with error: F7702-1290.It suggest to check I have the latest version of Firefox, which of course, I do.Any Ideas to solve the problem.

Same here, still no netflix. Win10 Pro as well.What I don't understand; can't you just enable logging, so we can view what actually goes wrong where? In linux this always solves every little shitty problem for me, I just look in the logs. But with firefox in Windows, it's like using a black box. Not only is it not showing in any 'event logs', it is also not clear where in Firefox I would find any logs of stuff not working.

Even if a title is 1080p on Tier 1 only TV shows, the ICT on Tier 2 limited titles like movies means even if you try to get 1080p, you only get 540p. Tier 2 enforces HDCP verification, and if it fails, it will not run (in the case of Disney+) or will do ICT and lower the resolution on purpose.

Want to watch Netflix on your Linux device, but not sure how? Over the years it has proven tricky to enjoy movies and TV from your Netflix account on Linux. When Netflix relied on the Microsoft Silverlight software, it was almost impossible.

For the overwhelming majority of readers, Linux no longer has a problem running Netflix. If your distribution comes with Google Chrome, then all you need to do is open Chrome, navigate to Netflix and start enjoying the movies and TV shows in their library.

Yet it makes sense. Netflix uses HTML 5 and Silverlight to stream movies, depending on your operating system and the capabilities of your browser. Recent versions of Chrome (37 or later) will rely on HTML 5, which saves having to mess around with plugins.

I tried with google-chrome, chromium and firefox, to no avail. The "best" quality I can select is 1.17GB per hour, and everything looks like crap. The same video shows a label "HD 1080p" or something like that in macos besides the time/time remaining text (nothing in linux), and the settings menu lets me choose more than 6GB per hour as "best" quality. It looks way better.

Amazon says HD is not supported in anything other than windows/macos, so I would assume that it cannot be done, but I see SO MANY posts in a lot forums from many people saying that they get HD streams without doing anything special in linux that MAYBE there is some way I'm not seeing.

Yeah, I'm starting to think that the people saying they can play HD content in linux nowadays either a) can't tell the difference or b) tried in the past (before April) and still assume they can. I've also tried everything with every browser to no avail.

Tried using firefox with wine, amazon tells me I lack DRM. Tried to use Safari with wine, just shuts down, with Playonlinux, it does start and is stable, but when I go to amazon Webpage, I just get a black page, and only there. Really strange, all that.

Once you have taken care of your media files, open the movie tab on the Plex Media Center interface and browse to add the movies folder from your hard drive. Repeat the step for each media type. Once done, give Plex some time to scan and process those files.

Watching the popular streaming service Netflix requires a small additional step besides simply logging on and watching. Because you need to specifically enable DRM (Digital Rights Management) in your web browser. And modern HTML5-based streaming uses CDM (Content Decryption Module). DRM/CDM technology enforces certain audio and video security requirements to play in your browser. The movies, TV shows, and documentaries that you watch are copyright protected and encrypted. And you need an additional add-on or plugin in your web browser to decrypt them first to play.

Many of you probably are familiar with the Roku media streaming device. In a partnership with Netflix, the Roku is one of several officially supported devices for streaming the large collection of Netflix's available movies and television shows. What makes the Roku interesting is that although Netflix doesn't support streaming its DRM-protected movies to Linux users, the Roku itself runs Linux.

The technology to stream Netflix titles to Linux is obviously available. Hopefully, as Linux users, we'll soon be able to join the Internet streaming club and watch movies on our desktops. Even more exciting will be media players like Boxee and XBMC (both of which run under Linux) being able to stream Netflix titles.

Not sure what to watch tonight? Here are our guides for the absolute best movies on Netflix, must-see Netflix original series, documentaries, docuseries, and movies. 

Looking for something more specific? Here are our Netflix guides for the best war movies, documentaries, anime, indie flicks, true crime, food shows, rom-coms, LGBT movies, alien movies, gangster movies, Westerns, film noir, and movies based on true stories streaming right now. There are also sad movies guaranteed to make you cry, weird movies to melt your brain, old movies when you need something classic, and standup specials when you really need to laugh. Or check out Flixable, a search engine for Netflix.

Netflix has been going through some changes lately, most notably pressing play on its account-sharing restrictions, as well as adding an ad-based tier to its services. It's not likely that either of these changes has affected the playback of your services, but if for some reason you find your Netflix shows and movies aren't playing in the HD or 4K resolution that you're paying for, we're here to help troubleshoot. ff782bc1db

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