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Médias (1)
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The Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow
28 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Texte
Autres articles (84)
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Récupération d’informations sur le site maître à l’installation d’une instance
26 novembre 2010, parUtilité
Sur le site principal, une instance de mutualisation est définie par plusieurs choses : Les données dans la table spip_mutus ; Son logo ; Son auteur principal (id_admin dans la table spip_mutus correspondant à un id_auteur de la table spip_auteurs)qui sera le seul à pouvoir créer définitivement l’instance de mutualisation ;
Il peut donc être tout à fait judicieux de vouloir récupérer certaines de ces informations afin de compléter l’installation d’une instance pour, par exemple : récupérer le (...) -
Publier sur MédiaSpip
13 juin 2013Puis-je poster des contenus à partir d’une tablette Ipad ?
Oui, si votre Médiaspip installé est à la version 0.2 ou supérieure. Contacter au besoin l’administrateur de votre MédiaSpip pour le savoir -
Encoding and processing into web-friendly formats
13 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP automatically converts uploaded files to internet-compatible formats.
Video files are encoded in MP4, Ogv and WebM (supported by HTML5) and MP4 (supported by Flash).
Audio files are encoded in MP3 and Ogg (supported by HTML5) and MP3 (supported by Flash).
Where possible, text is analyzed in order to retrieve the data needed for search engine detection, and then exported as a series of image files.
All uploaded files are stored online in their original format, so you can (...)
Sur d’autres sites (5287)
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Quicktime Eats Cookies
20 septembre 2009It appears that when embedding Quicktime in a webpage, being viewed by Safari 4 in Snow Leopard, Quicktime no longer passes cookies to the server. So, if you’re having the Quicktime plugin load a file that uses cookie data to verify permissions, you’ll need to move to a query string model.
This only happens when Safari is running in 64bit mode, so I imagine it has to do with the "plugins running as separate entities" crash protection that Snow Leopard adds.
This does not appear to impact the Flash plugin.
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Given an x264 stream and an ogg vorbis stream, how do I make a muxed stream that mplayer/VLC can read ?
14 avril 2012, par dascandyI'm confused and a bit stuck with this question. All I can find on Google is basic usage of transcoding software, which is not related to the question.
I'm making a game and I'd like to include native capture ability to stream video. I would much like to stream this to a standard-ish client, such as VLC. It needs to be both in a format it recognizes and it needs to be multiplexed in order for this to work.
My question therefore is, I know how to encode stuff from raw video frames to x264 (see also How to encode series of images into H264 using x264 API ? (C/C++) ). I know how to encode raw audio samples into ogg/vorbis. Now, how do I put one and one together for VLC ?
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Given an x264 stream and an ogg vorbis stream, how do I make a muxed stream that mplayer/VLC can read ?
14 avril 2012, par dascandyI'm confused and a bit stuck with this question. All I can find on Google is basic usage of transcoding software, which is not related to the question.
I'm making a game and I'd like to include native capture ability to stream video. I would much like to stream this to a standard-ish client, such as VLC. It needs to be both in a format it recognizes and it needs to be multiplexed in order for this to work.
My question therefore is, I know how to encode stuff from raw video frames to x264 (see also How to encode series of images into H264 using x264 API ? (C/C++) ). I know how to encode raw audio samples into ogg/vorbis. Now, how do I put one and one together for VLC ?