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  • Publier sur MédiaSpip

    13 juin 2013

    Puis-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

  • XMP PHP

    13 mai 2011, par

    Dixit Wikipedia, XMP signifie :
    Extensible Metadata Platform ou XMP est un format de métadonnées basé sur XML utilisé dans les applications PDF, de photographie et de graphisme. Il a été lancé par Adobe Systems en avril 2001 en étant intégré à la version 5.0 d’Adobe Acrobat.
    Étant basé sur XML, il gère un ensemble de tags dynamiques pour l’utilisation dans le cadre du Web sémantique.
    XMP permet d’enregistrer sous forme d’un document XML des informations relatives à un fichier : titre, auteur, historique (...)

  • Formulaire personnalisable

    21 juin 2013, par

    Cette page présente les champs disponibles dans le formulaire de publication d’un média et il indique les différents champs qu’on peut ajouter. Formulaire de création d’un Media
    Dans le cas d’un document de type média, les champs proposés par défaut sont : Texte Activer/Désactiver le forum ( on peut désactiver l’invite au commentaire pour chaque article ) Licence Ajout/suppression d’auteurs Tags
    On peut modifier ce formulaire dans la partie :
    Administration > Configuration des masques de formulaire. (...)

Sur d’autres sites (2920)

  • Error while building ParaView on ubuntu

    21 février 2014, par user3337492

    I´ve got school project that I have to build ParaView and work with it in parallel.

    I am using this guide : http://paraview.org/Wiki/ParaView:Build_And_Install

    I´ve installed all the required packages and now it is time to "Configure ParaView With CMake".

    When I do this recomended code

    mkdir $HOME/projects/ParaView-bin

    cd $HOME/projects/ParaView-bin

    ccmake $HOME/projects/ParaView3

    the terminal shows this :

    CMake Error : The source "/home/kulis/projects/ParaView3/CMakeLists.txt" does
    not match the source "/home/kulis/projects/ParaView/CMakeLists.txt" used to
    generate cache. Re-run cmake with a different source directory.

    so instead of ParaView3 I use ParaView in code : ccmake $HOME/projects/ParaView

    then its possible to set all the variables and compile. But there comes the real problem. When i want to compile it, the terminal shows this error message :

    ERROR ADD_PARAVIEW_VIEW_MODULE called without VIEW_TYPE or VIEW_XML_GROUP

    CMake Error : The following variables are used in this project, but they are set to NOTFOUND.
    Please set them or make sure they are set and tested correctly in the CMake files :
    /home/kulis/projects/ParaView/VTK/IO/FFMPEG/FFMPEG_INCLUDE_DIR
    used as include directory in directory /home/kulis/projects/ParaView/VTK/IO/FFMPEG
    FFMPEG_avcodec_LIBRARY (ADVANCED)
    linked by target "vtkIOFFMPEG" in directory /home/kulis/projects/ParaView/VTK/IO/FFMPEG
    FFMPEG_avformat_LIBRARY (ADVANCED)
    linked by target "vtkIOFFMPEG" in directory /home/kulis/projects/ParaView/VTK/IO/FFMPEG
    FFMPEG_avutil_LIBRARY (ADVANCED)
    linked by target "vtkIOFFMPEG" in directory /home/kulis/projects/ParaView/VTK/IO/FFMPEG
    FFMPEG_swscale_LIBRARY (ADVANCED)
    linked by target "vtkIOFFMPEG" in directory /home/kulis/projects/ParaView/VTK/IO/FFMPEG

    And I do not really know what to do with it.

    I would very much appreciate your help. Thanks

  • Package 'ffmpeg' has no installation candidate while installing tensorflow

    7 avril 2020, par DragonOnMitte

    I`m a german studant. For the school I have to make a physics or chemistry project, I decided to install tensorflow on a raspberry pi to train a object detection modal. 
But there is an error I don´t understand.
'Package 'ffmpeg' has no insstallation candidate.'

    



    I tried to install ffmpeg from source but this didn´t help

    



    I use a raspberry pi 4 4gb ram.
With Raspbain 10 (buster)

    


  • Logic and lawyers

    22 mai 2013, par Mans — Law and liberty

    Reading about various patent litigation cases, I am struck by the frequency with which common logical fallacies such as the Appeal to Consequences are committed. We shall look at a couple of recent examples.

    In conjunction with the Federal Circuit ruling in CLS Bank v. Alice Corp., Judge Moore, joined by three others, filed a dissenting opinion wherein we find the following :

    I am concerned that the current interpretation of § 101, and in particular the abstract idea exception, is causing a free fall in the patent system. [...] And let’s be clear : if all of these claims, including the system claims, are not patent-eligible, this case is the death of hundreds of thousands of patents [...].

    A footnote adds :

    If the reasoning of Judge Lourie’s opinion were adopted, it would decimate the electronics and software industries. [...] There has never been a case which could do more damage to the patent system than this one.

    From the above, I get the impression Moore is primarily concerned with protecting the system, maintaining the status quo, less with ruling in line with the logical consequences of statute and case law. Furthermore, her argument rests on the premise that a weaker patent system would “decimate the industries,” a notion supported by little evidence, yet presented by Moore as an obvious truth. In fact, research exists suggesting that many important innovations are never actually patented. Let us also not overlook the fact that European companies do not appear to be suffering from the much weaker patent protection for software afforded there.

    Judge Moore’s reasoning can be summarised in three steps :

    1. Ruling this way could be disruptive to the patent system.
    2. The industry relies on patents.
    3. Therefore we must not rule this way.

    Not only does she commit the aforementioned logical fallacy, she does so by way of invalid arguments.

    The second example of such fallacious reasoning comes from the Supreme Court ruling in Bowman v. Monsanto :

    We have always drawn the boundaries of the exhaustion doctrine to exclude that activity [copying], so that the patentee retains an undiminished right to prohibit others from making the thing his patent protects. [...] That is because, once again, if simple copying were a protected use, a patent would plummet in value after the first sale of the first item containing the invention. The undiluted patent monopoly, it might be said, would extend not for 20 years (as the Patent Act promises), but for only one transaction. And that would result in less incentive for innovation than Congress wanted. Hence our repeated insistence that exhaustion applies only to the particular item sold, and not to reproductions.

    Here we find the same pattern repeated. The aim of the court appears to have been ensuring the continued validity of this class of patents, not reaching a logical conclusion regarding the question of infringement. Once again, we can break the reasoning down into three steps :

    1. A non-infringement ruling would weaken the patent.
    2. Weaker patents would provide less incentive for innovation.
    3. Therefore we must rule infringement.

    As in the first example, the argument presented in step two is at best questionable, and no supporting evidence is provided.

    These are, unfortunately, not the only examples of such fallacies ; one might even describe them as ubiquitous. Does a law education not include any material on logical reasoning ? Ought it not ? While we can never hope to find any kind of universal truth on which to base our laws, we should at least strive to make our system logically consistent. If we do not, notions such as fairness and justice lose their meanings.