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Médias (91)
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DJ Z-trip - Victory Lap : The Obama Mix Pt. 2
15 septembre 2011
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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Matmos - Action at a Distance
15 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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DJ Dolores - Oslodum 2004 (includes (cc) sample of “Oslodum” by Gilberto Gil)
15 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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Danger Mouse & Jemini - What U Sittin’ On ? (starring Cee Lo and Tha Alkaholiks)
15 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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Cornelius - Wataridori 2
15 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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The Rapture - Sister Saviour (Blackstrobe Remix)
15 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
Autres articles (15)
-
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 -
Emballe médias : à quoi cela sert ?
4 février 2011, parCe plugin vise à gérer des sites de mise en ligne de documents de tous types.
Il crée des "médias", à savoir : un "média" est un article au sens SPIP créé automatiquement lors du téléversement d’un document qu’il soit audio, vidéo, image ou textuel ; un seul document ne peut être lié à un article dit "média" ; -
Selection of projects using MediaSPIP
2 mai 2011, parThe examples below are representative elements of MediaSPIP specific uses for specific projects.
MediaSPIP farm @ Infini
The non profit organizationInfini develops hospitality activities, internet access point, training, realizing innovative projects in the field of information and communication technologies and Communication, and hosting of websites. It plays a unique and prominent role in the Brest (France) area, at the national level, among the half-dozen such association. Its members (...)
Sur d’autres sites (2963)
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My journey to Coviu
27 octobre 2015, par silviaMy new startup just released our MVP – this is the story of what got me here.
I love creating new applications that let people do their work better or in a manner that wasn’t possible before.
My first such passion was as a student intern when I built a system for a building and loan association’s monthly customer magazine. The group I worked with was managing their advertiser contacts through a set of paper cards and I wrote a dBase based system (yes, that long ago) that would manage their customer relationships. They loved it – until it got replaced by an SAP system that cost 100 times what I cost them, had really poor UX, and only gave them half the functionality. It was a corporate system with ongoing support, which made all the difference to them.
The story repeated itself with a CRM for my Uncle’s construction company, and with a resume and quotation management system for Accenture right after Uni, both of which I left behind when I decided to go into research.
Even as a PhD student, I never lost sight of challenges that people were facing and wanted to develop technology to overcome problems. The aim of my PhD thesis was to prepare for the oncoming onslaught of audio and video on the Internet (yes, this was 1994 !) by developing algorithms to automatically extract and locate information in such files, which would enable users to structure, index and search such content.
Many of the use cases that we explored are now part of products or continue to be challenges : finding music that matches your preferences, identifying music or video pieces e.g. to count ads on the radio or to mark copyright infringement, or the automated creation of video summaries such as trailers.
This continued when I joined the CSIRO in Australia – I was working on segmenting speech into words or talk spurts since that would simplify captioning & subtitling, and on MPEG-7 which was a (slightly over-engineered) standard to structure metadata about audio and video.
In 2001 I had the idea of replicating the Web for videos : i.e. creating hyperlinked and searchable video-only experiences. We called it “Annodex” for annotated and indexed video and it needed full-screen hyperlinked video in browsers – man were we ahead of our time ! It was my first step into standards, got several IETF RFCs to my name, and started my involvement with open codecs through Xiph.
Around the time that YouTube was founded in 2006, I founded Vquence – originally a video search company for the Web, but pivoted to a video metadata mining company. Vquence still exists and continues to sell its data to channel partners, but it lacks the user impact that has always driven my work.
As the video element started being developed for HTML5, I had to get involved. I contributed many use cases to the W3C, became a co-editor of the HTML5 spec and focused on video captioning with WebVTT while contracting to Mozilla and later to Google. We made huge progress and today the technology exists to publish video on the Web with captions, making the Web more inclusive for everybody. I contributed code to YouTube and Google Chrome, but was keen to make a bigger impact again.
The opportunity came when a couple of former CSIRO colleagues who now worked for NICTA approached me to get me interested in addressing new use cases for video conferencing in the context of WebRTC. We worked on a kiosk-style solution to service delivery for large service organisations, particularly targeting government. The emerging WebRTC standard posed many technical challenges that we addressed by building rtc.io , by contributing to the standards, and registering bugs on the browsers.
Fast-forward through the development of a few further custom solutions for customers in health and education and we are starting to see patterns of need emerge. The core learning that we’ve come away with is that to get things done, you have to go beyond “talking heads” in a video call. It’s not just about seeing the other person, but much more about having a shared view of the things that need to be worked on and a shared way of interacting with them. Also, we learnt that the things that are being worked on are quite varied and may include multiple input cameras, digital documents, Web pages, applications, device data, controls, forms.
So we set out to build a solution that would enable productive remote collaboration to take place. It would need to provide an excellent user experience, it would need to be simple to work with, provide for the standard use cases out of the box, yet be architected to be extensible for specialised data sharing needs that we knew some of our customers had. It would need to be usable directly on Coviu.com, but also able to integrate with specialised applications that some of our customers were already using, such as the applications that they spend most of their time in (CRMs, practice management systems, learning management systems, team chat systems). It would need to require our customers to sign up, yet their clients to join a call without sign-up.
Collaboration is a big problem. People are continuing to get more comfortable with technology and are less and less inclined to travel distances just to get a service done. In a country as large as Australia, where 12% of the population lives in rural and remote areas, people may not even be able to travel distances, particularly to receive or provide recurring or specialised services, or to achieve work/life balance. To make the world a global village, we need to be able to work together better remotely.
The need for collaboration is being recognised by specialised Web applications already, such as the LiveShare feature of Invision for Designers, Codassium for pair programming, or the recently announced Dropbox Paper. Few go all the way to video – WebRTC is still regarded as a complicated feature to support.
With Coviu, we’d like to offer a collaboration feature to every Web app. We now have a Web app that provides a modern and beautifully designed collaboration interface. To enable other Web apps to integrate it, we are now developing an API. Integration may entail customisation of the data sharing part of Coviu – something Coviu has been designed for. How to replicate the data and keep it consistent when people collaborate remotely – that is where Coviu makes a difference.
We have started our journey and have just launched free signup to the Coviu base product, which allows individuals to own their own “room” (i.e. a fixed URL) in which to collaborate with others. A huge shout out goes to everyone in the Coviu team – a pretty amazing group of people – who have turned the app from an idea to reality. You are all awesome !
With Coviu you can share and annotate :
- images (show your mum photos of your last holidays, or get feedback on an architecture diagram from a customer),
- pdf files (give a presentation remotely, or walk a customer through a contract),
- whiteboards (brainstorm with a colleague), and
- share an application window (watch a YouTube video together, or work through your task list with your colleagues).
All of these are regarded as “shared documents” in Coviu and thus have zooming and annotations features and are listed in a document tray for ease of navigation.
This is just the beginning of how we want to make working together online more productive. Give it a go and let us know what you think.
The post My journey to Coviu first appeared on ginger’s thoughts.
-
My journey to Coviu
27 octobre 2015, par silviaMy new startup just released our MVP – this is the story of what got me here.
I love creating new applications that let people do their work better or in a manner that wasn’t possible before.
My first such passion was as a student intern when I built a system for a building and loan association’s monthly customer magazine. The group I worked with was managing their advertiser contacts through a set of paper cards and I wrote a dBase based system (yes, that long ago) that would manage their customer relationships. They loved it – until it got replaced by an SAP system that cost 100 times what I cost them, had really poor UX, and only gave them half the functionality. It was a corporate system with ongoing support, which made all the difference to them.
The story repeated itself with a CRM for my Uncle’s construction company, and with a resume and quotation management system for Accenture right after Uni, both of which I left behind when I decided to go into research.
Even as a PhD student, I never lost sight of challenges that people were facing and wanted to develop technology to overcome problems. The aim of my PhD thesis was to prepare for the oncoming onslaught of audio and video on the Internet (yes, this was 1994 !) by developing algorithms to automatically extract and locate information in such files, which would enable users to structure, index and search such content.
Many of the use cases that we explored are now part of products or continue to be challenges : finding music that matches your preferences, identifying music or video pieces e.g. to count ads on the radio or to mark copyright infringement, or the automated creation of video summaries such as trailers.
This continued when I joined the CSIRO in Australia – I was working on segmenting speech into words or talk spurts since that would simplify captioning & subtitling, and on MPEG-7 which was a (slightly over-engineered) standard to structure metadata about audio and video.
In 2001 I had the idea of replicating the Web for videos : i.e. creating hyperlinked and searchable video-only experiences. We called it “Annodex” for annotated and indexed video and it needed full-screen hyperlinked video in browsers – man were we ahead of our time ! It was my first step into standards, got several IETF RFCs to my name, and started my involvement with open codecs through Xiph.
Around the time that YouTube was founded in 2006, I founded Vquence – originally a video search company for the Web, but pivoted to a video metadata mining company. Vquence still exists and continues to sell its data to channel partners, but it lacks the user impact that has always driven my work.
As the video element started being developed for HTML5, I had to get involved. I contributed many use cases to the W3C, became a co-editor of the HTML5 spec and focused on video captioning with WebVTT while contracting to Mozilla and later to Google. We made huge progress and today the technology exists to publish video on the Web with captions, making the Web more inclusive for everybody. I contributed code to YouTube and Google Chrome, but was keen to make a bigger impact again.
The opportunity came when a couple of former CSIRO colleagues who now worked for NICTA approached me to get me interested in addressing new use cases for video conferencing in the context of WebRTC. We worked on a kiosk-style solution to service delivery for large service organisations, particularly targeting government. The emerging WebRTC standard posed many technical challenges that we addressed by building rtc.io , by contributing to the standards, and registering bugs on the browsers.
Fast-forward through the development of a few further custom solutions for customers in health and education and we are starting to see patterns of need emerge. The core learning that we’ve come away with is that to get things done, you have to go beyond “talking heads” in a video call. It’s not just about seeing the other person, but much more about having a shared view of the things that need to be worked on and a shared way of interacting with them. Also, we learnt that the things that are being worked on are quite varied and may include multiple input cameras, digital documents, Web pages, applications, device data, controls, forms.
So we set out to build a solution that would enable productive remote collaboration to take place. It would need to provide an excellent user experience, it would need to be simple to work with, provide for the standard use cases out of the box, yet be architected to be extensible for specialised data sharing needs that we knew some of our customers had. It would need to be usable directly on Coviu.com, but also able to integrate with specialised applications that some of our customers were already using, such as the applications that they spend most of their time in (CRMs, practice management systems, learning management systems, team chat systems). It would need to require our customers to sign up, yet their clients to join a call without sign-up.
Collaboration is a big problem. People are continuing to get more comfortable with technology and are less and less inclined to travel distances just to get a service done. In a country as large as Australia, where 12% of the population lives in rural and remote areas, people may not even be able to travel distances, particularly to receive or provide recurring or specialised services, or to achieve work/life balance. To make the world a global village, we need to be able to work together better remotely.
The need for collaboration is being recognised by specialised Web applications already, such as the LiveShare feature of Invision for Designers, Codassium for pair programming, or the recently announced Dropbox Paper. Few go all the way to video – WebRTC is still regarded as a complicated feature to support.
With Coviu, we’d like to offer a collaboration feature to every Web app. We now have a Web app that provides a modern and beautifully designed collaboration interface. To enable other Web apps to integrate it, we are now developing an API. Integration may entail customisation of the data sharing part of Coviu – something Coviu has been designed for. How to replicate the data and keep it consistent when people collaborate remotely – that is where Coviu makes a difference.
We have started our journey and have just launched free signup to the Coviu base product, which allows individuals to own their own “room” (i.e. a fixed URL) in which to collaborate with others. A huge shout out goes to everyone in the Coviu team – a pretty amazing group of people – who have turned the app from an idea to reality. You are all awesome !
With Coviu you can share and annotate :
- images (show your mum photos of your last holidays, or get feedback on an architecture diagram from a customer),
- pdf files (give a presentation remotely, or walk a customer through a contract),
- whiteboards (brainstorm with a colleague), and
- share an application window (watch a YouTube video together, or work through your task list with your colleagues).
All of these are regarded as “shared documents” in Coviu and thus have zooming and annotations features and are listed in a document tray for ease of navigation.
This is just the beginning of how we want to make working together online more productive. Give it a go and let us know what you think.
-
Cannot play local RTP stream
24 janvier 2020, par gdogg371I have been struggling along with this issue now for a while, but am making good progress. I now have a 4k transport stream running using the below command line arguments for VLC :
vlc --ffmpeg-hw --avcodec-hw=any dshow:// :dshow-vdev="Video (00 Pro Capture HDMI 4K+)" :dshow-adev="Audio (2- 00 Pro Capture HDMI 4K+)" :dshow-threads=8 :dshow-aspect-ratio=16\:9 :dshow-size="3840x2160" :dshow-pixel_format=yuv444p16le :dshow-tune=film :dshow-preset=lossless :dshow-profile=main10 show-vcodec=hevc_nvenc :dshow-fps=50 :dshow-crf=0 :dshow-acodec=mp4a :dshow-stereo-mode=5 :dshow-force-surround-sound=0 :dshow-ab=128 :dshow-samplerate=44100 :no-dshow-config :live-caching=3000 --sout "#transcode{venc=ffmpeg,vcodec=mpgv,threads=8,aspect=16:9,width=3840,height=2160,fps=50,acodec=a52,ab=1500,channels=6,samplerate=48000,soverlay}:rtp{dst=239.255.0.1,port=5004,mux=ts}"
I can access the rtp stream on the same PC as I am running the stream from with the below :
vlc -vvv rtp://@239.255.0.1:5004
However, if I try the same commands on a different computer, connected via Ethernet to the same network, the client VLC session just hangs. I have included the log below with the verbosity set to debug. Can anyone spot anything in here suggesting why the stream won’t play ?
-- logger module started --
main debug: VLC media player - 3.0.8 Vetinari
main debug: Copyright © 1996-2019 the VideoLAN team
main debug: revision 3.0.8-0-gf350b6b5a7
main debug: configured with ../extras/package/win32/../../../configure '--enable-update-check' '--enable-lua' '--enable-faad' '--enable-flac' '--enable-theora' '--enable-avcodec' '--enable-merge-ffmpeg' '--enable-dca' '--enable-mpc' '--enable-libass' '--enable-schroedinger' '--enable-realrtsp' '--enable-live555' '--enable-dvdread' '--enable-shout' '--enable-goom' '--enable-caca' '--enable-qt' '--enable-skins2' '--enable-sse' '--enable-mmx' '--enable-libcddb' '--enable-zvbi' '--disable-telx' '--enable-nls' '--host=x86_64-w64-mingw32' '--with-breakpad=https://win.crashes.videolan.org' 'host_alias=x86_64-w64-mingw32' 'PKG_CONFIG_LIBDIR=/home/jenkins/workspace/vlc-release/windows/vlc-release-win32-x64/contrib/x86_64-w64-mingw32/lib/pkgconfig'
main debug: using multimedia timers as clock source
main debug: min period: 1 ms, max period: 1000000 ms
main debug: searching plug-in modules
main debug: loading plugins cache file D:\VLC\plugins\plugins.dat
main debug: recursively browsing `D:\VLC\plugins'
main error: stale plugins cache: modified D:\VLC\plugins\access\libaccess_concat_plugin.dll
main error: stale plugins cache: modified D:\VLC\plugins\access\libaccess_imem_plugin.dll
....
....
....
main error: stale plugins cache: modified D:\VLC\plugins\visualization\libgoom_plugin.dll
main error: stale plugins cache: modified D:\VLC\plugins\visualization\libprojectm_plugin.dll
main error: stale plugins cache: modified D:\VLC\plugins\visualization\libvisual_plugin.dll
main debug: plug-ins loaded: 494 modules
main debug: opening config file (C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Roaming\vlc\vlcrc)
main debug: looking for logger module matching "any": 2 candidates
file debug: opening logfile `D:\VLC\Log.txt'
main debug: using logger module "file"
main debug: translation test: code is "en_GB"
main debug: looking for keystore module matching "memory": 3 candidates
main debug: using keystore module "memory"
main debug: CPU has capabilities MMX MMXEXT SSE SSE2 SSE3 SSSE3 SSE4.1 SSE4.2 FPU
main debug: Creating an input for 'Media Library'
main debug: Input is a meta file: disabling unneeded options
main debug: using timeshift granularity of 50 MiB
main debug: using timeshift path: C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Local\Temp
main debug: `file/directory:///C:/Users/cg371/AppData/Roaming/vlc/ml.xspf' gives access `file' demux `directory' path `/C:/Users/cg371/AppData/Roaming/vlc/ml.xspf'
main debug: creating demux: access='file' demux='directory' location='/C:/Users/cg371/AppData/Roaming/vlc/ml.xspf' file='C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Roaming\vlc\ml.xspf'
main debug: looking for access_demux module matching "file": 15 candidates
main debug: no access_demux modules matched
main debug: creating access: file:///C:/Users/cg371/AppData/Roaming/vlc/ml.xspf
main debug: (path: C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Roaming\vlc\ml.xspf)
main debug: looking for access module matching "file": 26 candidates
main debug: using access module "filesystem"
main debug: looking for stream_filter module matching "prefetch,cache_read": 24 candidates
cache_read debug: Using stream method for AStream*
cache_read debug: starting pre-buffering
cache_read debug: received first data after 1 ms
cache_read debug: pre-buffering done 304 bytes in 0s - 296 KiB/s
main debug: using stream_filter module "cache_read"
main debug: looking for stream_filter module matching "any": 24 candidates
playlist debug: using XSPF playlist reader
main debug: using stream_filter module "playlist"
main debug: stream filter added to 00000266f6927700
main debug: looking for stream_filter module matching "any": 24 candidates
main debug: no stream_filter modules matched
main debug: looking for stream_directory module matching "any": 1 candidates
main debug: no stream_directory modules matched
main debug: attachment of directory-extractor failed for file:///C:/Users/cg371/AppData/Roaming/vlc/ml.xspf
main debug: looking for stream_filter module matching "record": 24 candidates
main debug: using stream_filter module "record"
main debug: creating demux: access='file' demux='directory' location='/C:/Users/cg371/AppData/Roaming/vlc/ml.xspf' file='C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Roaming\vlc\ml.xspf'
main debug: looking for demux module matching "directory": 55 candidates
main debug: using demux module "directory"
main debug: looking for meta reader module matching "any": 2 candidates
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Roaming\vlc\lua\meta\reader
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in D:\VLC\lua\meta\reader
lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script D:\VLC\lua\meta\reader\filename.luac
main debug: no meta reader modules matched
main debug: `file/directory:///C:/Users/cg371/AppData/Roaming/vlc/ml.xspf' successfully opened
main debug: looking for xml reader module matching "any": 1 candidates
main debug: using xml reader module "xml"
main debug: EOF reached
main debug: removing module "directory"
main debug: removing module "record"
main debug: removing module "playlist"
main debug: removing module "cache_read"
main debug: removing module "filesystem"
main debug: creating audio output
main debug: looking for audio output module matching "any": 6 candidates
mmdevice debug: using default device
mmdevice debug: display name changed: VLC media player (LibVLC 3.0.8)
mmdevice debug: version 2 session control unavailable
mmdevice debug: volume from -65.250000 dB to +0.000000 dB with 0.031250 dB increments
main debug: using audio output module "mmdevice"
main debug: keeping audio output
main debug: looking for interface module matching "hotkeys,none": 16 candidates
main debug: using interface module "hotkeys"
main debug: looking for interface module matching "globalhotkeys,none": 16 candidates
main debug: using interface module "win32"
main: Running vlc with the default interface. Use 'cvlc' to use vlc without interface.
main debug: looking for interface module matching "any": 16 candidates
main debug: looking for extension module matching "any": 1 candidates
lua debug: Opening Lua Extension module
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Roaming\vlc\lua\extensions
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in D:\VLC\lua\extensions
lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script D:\VLC\lua\extensions\VLSub.luac
lua debug: Scanning Lua script D:\VLC\lua\extensions\VLSub.luac
lua debug: Script D:\VLC\lua\extensions\VLSub.luac has the following capability flags: 0x5
main debug: using extension module "lua"
main debug: using interface module "qt"
main debug: processing request item: null, node: Playlist, skip: 0
main debug: rebuilding array of current - root Playlist
main debug: rebuild done - 1 items, index -1
main debug: starting playback of new item
main debug: resyncing on rtp://239.255.0.1:5004
main debug: rtp://239.255.0.1:5004 is at 0
main debug: creating new input thread
main debug: Creating an input for 'rtp://239.255.0.1:5004'
main debug: requesting art for new input thread
main debug: using timeshift granularity of 50 MiB
main debug: using timeshift path: C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Local\Temp
main debug: `rtp://@239.255.0.1:5004' gives access `rtp' demux `any' path `@239.255.0.1:5004'
main debug: creating demux: access='rtp' demux='any' location='@239.255.0.1:5004' file='\\@239.255.0.1:5004'
main debug: looking for access_demux module matching "rtp": 15 candidates
main debug: net: opening 239.255.0.1 datagram port 5004
qt debug: IM: Setting an input
main debug: looking for meta fetcher module matching "any": 1 candidates
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Roaming\vlc\lua\meta\fetcher
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in D:\VLC\lua\meta\fetcher
main debug: no meta fetcher modules matched
main debug: looking for art finder module matching "any": 2 candidates
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Roaming\vlc\lua\meta\art
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in D:\VLC\lua\meta\art
lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script D:\VLC\lua\meta\art\00_musicbrainz.luac
lua debug: skipping script (unmatched scope) D:\VLC\lua\meta\art\00_musicbrainz.luac
lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script D:\VLC\lua\meta\art\01_googleimage.luac
lua debug: skipping script (unmatched scope) D:\VLC\lua\meta\art\01_googleimage.luac
lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script D:\VLC\lua\meta\art\02_frenchtv.luac
lua debug: skipping script (unmatched scope) D:\VLC\lua\meta\art\02_frenchtv.luac
lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script D:\VLC\lua\meta\art\03_lastfm.luac
main debug: using access_demux module "rtp"
main debug: looking for meta reader module matching "any": 2 candidates
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Roaming\vlc\lua\meta\reader
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in D:\VLC\lua\meta\reader
lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script D:\VLC\lua\meta\reader\filename.luac
lua debug: skipping script (unmatched scope) D:\VLC\lua\meta\art\03_lastfm.luac
main debug: no art finder modules matched
main debug: no meta reader modules matched
main debug: `rtp://@239.255.0.1:5004' successfully opened
main debug: looking for meta fetcher module matching "any": 1 candidates
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Roaming\vlc\lua\meta\fetcher
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in D:\VLC\lua\meta\fetcher
main debug: no meta fetcher modules matched
main debug: looking for art finder module matching "any": 2 candidates
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Roaming\vlc\lua\meta\art
lua debug: Trying Lua scripts in D:\VLC\lua\meta\art
lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script D:\VLC\lua\meta\art\00_musicbrainz.luac
lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script D:\VLC\lua\meta\art\01_googleimage.luac
lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script D:\VLC\lua\meta\art\02_frenchtv.luac
lua debug: Trying Lua playlist script D:\VLC\lua\meta\art\03_lastfm.luac
main debug: no art finder modules matched
main debug: exiting
main debug: exiting
main debug: no exit handler
main debug: removing all interfaces
main debug: removing module "qt"
main debug: deactivating the playlist
main debug: incoming request - stopping current input
main debug: removing module "rtp"
main debug: dead input
main debug: nothing to play
main debug: removing module "mmdevice"
qt debug: requesting exit...
qt debug: waiting for UI thread...
qt debug: IM: Deleting the input
qt debug: QApp exec() finished
qt debug: Video is not needed anymore
qt debug: Killing extension dialog provider
qt debug: ExtensionsDialogProvider is quitting...
main debug: removing module "lua"
main debug: removing module "win32"
main debug: removing module "hotkeys"
main debug: destroying
main debug: saving media library to file C:\Users\cg371\AppData\Roaming\vlc\ml.xspf.tmp14968
main debug: looking for playlist export module matching "export-xspf": 4 candidates
main debug: using playlist export module "export"
main debug: removing module "export"
main debug: deleting item `Media Library'
main debug: deleting item `rtp://239.255.0.1:5004'
main debug: deleting item `Playlist'
main debug: removing module "memory"
-- logger module stopped --