How to install Unity Web Player in Ubuntu?












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How I can install Unity Web Player in system Linux 14.04 LTS 64-bit Ubuntu?



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    look also askubuntu.com/questions/425317/unity-web-player-for-ubuntu/…

    – JoKeR
    May 30 '15 at 15:46
















1















How I can install Unity Web Player in system Linux 14.04 LTS 64-bit Ubuntu?



Thanks










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    look also askubuntu.com/questions/425317/unity-web-player-for-ubuntu/…

    – JoKeR
    May 30 '15 at 15:46














1












1








1








How I can install Unity Web Player in system Linux 14.04 LTS 64-bit Ubuntu?



Thanks










share|improve this question
















How I can install Unity Web Player in system Linux 14.04 LTS 64-bit Ubuntu?



Thanks







unity-web-player






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edited May 30 '15 at 15:42









Graham

2,23661629




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asked May 30 '15 at 9:24









alexalex

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  • 1





    look also askubuntu.com/questions/425317/unity-web-player-for-ubuntu/…

    – JoKeR
    May 30 '15 at 15:46














  • 1





    look also askubuntu.com/questions/425317/unity-web-player-for-ubuntu/…

    – JoKeR
    May 30 '15 at 15:46








1




1





look also askubuntu.com/questions/425317/unity-web-player-for-ubuntu/…

– JoKeR
May 30 '15 at 15:46





look also askubuntu.com/questions/425317/unity-web-player-for-ubuntu/…

– JoKeR
May 30 '15 at 15:46










2 Answers
2






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oldest

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0














When you visit the official site https://unity3d.com/webplayer you can notice the following message:




UNITY WEB PLAYER



The Unity Web Player can be downloaded to run browser-based Windows
and Mac games and apps made with Unity. Unfortunately the Unity Web
Player is not supported for the device you are currently using.




And since I'm using Ubuntu, so in simple This will not work native in Ubuntu, or any other Linux distribution .



Now could it be installed in Wine?



Just visiting the wine tests site shows you can install 4.3.3f and newest in Linux systems using wine.



The test done on Fedora 19 x86_64. Now you can take a look to try for ubuntu.



So How to Install it using wine




  1. downloaded & installed Firefox (tested with 33.0.2)

  2. downloaded & installed Unity Web Player (full version) from here






share|improve this answer

































    0














    From the PIPELIGHT website:




    Pipelight is a wrapper for using Windows plugins in Linux browsers and
    therefore giving you the possibility to access services which are
    otherwise not available for Linux users. Typical examples of such
    services are Netflix and Amazon Instant, which both use the
    proprietary browser plugin Silverlight. These services cannot normally
    be used on Linux since this plugin is only available for Windows, and
    the only open source alternative (Moonlight) is lacking support for
    DRM.



    Pipelight helps you access these services by using the original
    Silverlight plugin directly in your browser, all while giving you a
    better hardware acceleration and performance than a virtual machine.
    Besides Silverlight, you can also use a variety of other plugins that
    are supported by Pipelight. Take a look at the installation page for a
    complete list.



    Pipelight uses a patched wine version to provide a windows environment
    to the plugins, but you do not need to worry about this as Pipelight
    will take care of installing, configuring and updating all supported
    plugins. From the perspective of the browser these plugins will behave
    just like any other normal Linux plugin after you have enabled them.




    Just go to http://pipelight.net/cms/installation.html and follow their instructions (which may vary over time), depending of your Linux distro and the packages (plugins) you want to install.



    NOTE: As of today, latest version (Release v0.2.8) hasn't been updated since 10 Dec 2014, so the project has been quite still since then (2 years).






    share|improve this answer























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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      0














      When you visit the official site https://unity3d.com/webplayer you can notice the following message:




      UNITY WEB PLAYER



      The Unity Web Player can be downloaded to run browser-based Windows
      and Mac games and apps made with Unity. Unfortunately the Unity Web
      Player is not supported for the device you are currently using.




      And since I'm using Ubuntu, so in simple This will not work native in Ubuntu, or any other Linux distribution .



      Now could it be installed in Wine?



      Just visiting the wine tests site shows you can install 4.3.3f and newest in Linux systems using wine.



      The test done on Fedora 19 x86_64. Now you can take a look to try for ubuntu.



      So How to Install it using wine




      1. downloaded & installed Firefox (tested with 33.0.2)

      2. downloaded & installed Unity Web Player (full version) from here






      share|improve this answer






























        0














        When you visit the official site https://unity3d.com/webplayer you can notice the following message:




        UNITY WEB PLAYER



        The Unity Web Player can be downloaded to run browser-based Windows
        and Mac games and apps made with Unity. Unfortunately the Unity Web
        Player is not supported for the device you are currently using.




        And since I'm using Ubuntu, so in simple This will not work native in Ubuntu, or any other Linux distribution .



        Now could it be installed in Wine?



        Just visiting the wine tests site shows you can install 4.3.3f and newest in Linux systems using wine.



        The test done on Fedora 19 x86_64. Now you can take a look to try for ubuntu.



        So How to Install it using wine




        1. downloaded & installed Firefox (tested with 33.0.2)

        2. downloaded & installed Unity Web Player (full version) from here






        share|improve this answer




























          0












          0








          0







          When you visit the official site https://unity3d.com/webplayer you can notice the following message:




          UNITY WEB PLAYER



          The Unity Web Player can be downloaded to run browser-based Windows
          and Mac games and apps made with Unity. Unfortunately the Unity Web
          Player is not supported for the device you are currently using.




          And since I'm using Ubuntu, so in simple This will not work native in Ubuntu, or any other Linux distribution .



          Now could it be installed in Wine?



          Just visiting the wine tests site shows you can install 4.3.3f and newest in Linux systems using wine.



          The test done on Fedora 19 x86_64. Now you can take a look to try for ubuntu.



          So How to Install it using wine




          1. downloaded & installed Firefox (tested with 33.0.2)

          2. downloaded & installed Unity Web Player (full version) from here






          share|improve this answer















          When you visit the official site https://unity3d.com/webplayer you can notice the following message:




          UNITY WEB PLAYER



          The Unity Web Player can be downloaded to run browser-based Windows
          and Mac games and apps made with Unity. Unfortunately the Unity Web
          Player is not supported for the device you are currently using.




          And since I'm using Ubuntu, so in simple This will not work native in Ubuntu, or any other Linux distribution .



          Now could it be installed in Wine?



          Just visiting the wine tests site shows you can install 4.3.3f and newest in Linux systems using wine.



          The test done on Fedora 19 x86_64. Now you can take a look to try for ubuntu.



          So How to Install it using wine




          1. downloaded & installed Firefox (tested with 33.0.2)

          2. downloaded & installed Unity Web Player (full version) from here







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited May 30 '15 at 9:35

























          answered May 30 '15 at 9:30









          MaythuxMaythux

          51.7k32171218




          51.7k32171218

























              0














              From the PIPELIGHT website:




              Pipelight is a wrapper for using Windows plugins in Linux browsers and
              therefore giving you the possibility to access services which are
              otherwise not available for Linux users. Typical examples of such
              services are Netflix and Amazon Instant, which both use the
              proprietary browser plugin Silverlight. These services cannot normally
              be used on Linux since this plugin is only available for Windows, and
              the only open source alternative (Moonlight) is lacking support for
              DRM.



              Pipelight helps you access these services by using the original
              Silverlight plugin directly in your browser, all while giving you a
              better hardware acceleration and performance than a virtual machine.
              Besides Silverlight, you can also use a variety of other plugins that
              are supported by Pipelight. Take a look at the installation page for a
              complete list.



              Pipelight uses a patched wine version to provide a windows environment
              to the plugins, but you do not need to worry about this as Pipelight
              will take care of installing, configuring and updating all supported
              plugins. From the perspective of the browser these plugins will behave
              just like any other normal Linux plugin after you have enabled them.




              Just go to http://pipelight.net/cms/installation.html and follow their instructions (which may vary over time), depending of your Linux distro and the packages (plugins) you want to install.



              NOTE: As of today, latest version (Release v0.2.8) hasn't been updated since 10 Dec 2014, so the project has been quite still since then (2 years).






              share|improve this answer




























                0














                From the PIPELIGHT website:




                Pipelight is a wrapper for using Windows plugins in Linux browsers and
                therefore giving you the possibility to access services which are
                otherwise not available for Linux users. Typical examples of such
                services are Netflix and Amazon Instant, which both use the
                proprietary browser plugin Silverlight. These services cannot normally
                be used on Linux since this plugin is only available for Windows, and
                the only open source alternative (Moonlight) is lacking support for
                DRM.



                Pipelight helps you access these services by using the original
                Silverlight plugin directly in your browser, all while giving you a
                better hardware acceleration and performance than a virtual machine.
                Besides Silverlight, you can also use a variety of other plugins that
                are supported by Pipelight. Take a look at the installation page for a
                complete list.



                Pipelight uses a patched wine version to provide a windows environment
                to the plugins, but you do not need to worry about this as Pipelight
                will take care of installing, configuring and updating all supported
                plugins. From the perspective of the browser these plugins will behave
                just like any other normal Linux plugin after you have enabled them.




                Just go to http://pipelight.net/cms/installation.html and follow their instructions (which may vary over time), depending of your Linux distro and the packages (plugins) you want to install.



                NOTE: As of today, latest version (Release v0.2.8) hasn't been updated since 10 Dec 2014, so the project has been quite still since then (2 years).






                share|improve this answer


























                  0












                  0








                  0







                  From the PIPELIGHT website:




                  Pipelight is a wrapper for using Windows plugins in Linux browsers and
                  therefore giving you the possibility to access services which are
                  otherwise not available for Linux users. Typical examples of such
                  services are Netflix and Amazon Instant, which both use the
                  proprietary browser plugin Silverlight. These services cannot normally
                  be used on Linux since this plugin is only available for Windows, and
                  the only open source alternative (Moonlight) is lacking support for
                  DRM.



                  Pipelight helps you access these services by using the original
                  Silverlight plugin directly in your browser, all while giving you a
                  better hardware acceleration and performance than a virtual machine.
                  Besides Silverlight, you can also use a variety of other plugins that
                  are supported by Pipelight. Take a look at the installation page for a
                  complete list.



                  Pipelight uses a patched wine version to provide a windows environment
                  to the plugins, but you do not need to worry about this as Pipelight
                  will take care of installing, configuring and updating all supported
                  plugins. From the perspective of the browser these plugins will behave
                  just like any other normal Linux plugin after you have enabled them.




                  Just go to http://pipelight.net/cms/installation.html and follow their instructions (which may vary over time), depending of your Linux distro and the packages (plugins) you want to install.



                  NOTE: As of today, latest version (Release v0.2.8) hasn't been updated since 10 Dec 2014, so the project has been quite still since then (2 years).






                  share|improve this answer













                  From the PIPELIGHT website:




                  Pipelight is a wrapper for using Windows plugins in Linux browsers and
                  therefore giving you the possibility to access services which are
                  otherwise not available for Linux users. Typical examples of such
                  services are Netflix and Amazon Instant, which both use the
                  proprietary browser plugin Silverlight. These services cannot normally
                  be used on Linux since this plugin is only available for Windows, and
                  the only open source alternative (Moonlight) is lacking support for
                  DRM.



                  Pipelight helps you access these services by using the original
                  Silverlight plugin directly in your browser, all while giving you a
                  better hardware acceleration and performance than a virtual machine.
                  Besides Silverlight, you can also use a variety of other plugins that
                  are supported by Pipelight. Take a look at the installation page for a
                  complete list.



                  Pipelight uses a patched wine version to provide a windows environment
                  to the plugins, but you do not need to worry about this as Pipelight
                  will take care of installing, configuring and updating all supported
                  plugins. From the perspective of the browser these plugins will behave
                  just like any other normal Linux plugin after you have enabled them.




                  Just go to http://pipelight.net/cms/installation.html and follow their instructions (which may vary over time), depending of your Linux distro and the packages (plugins) you want to install.



                  NOTE: As of today, latest version (Release v0.2.8) hasn't been updated since 10 Dec 2014, so the project has been quite still since then (2 years).







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered Nov 24 '16 at 5:17









                  Jose BarakatJose Barakat

                  15114




                  15114






























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