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Médias (91)
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#3 The Safest Place
16 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Février 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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#4 Emo Creates
15 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Février 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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#2 Typewriter Dance
15 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Février 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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#1 The Wires
11 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Février 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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ED-ME-5 1-DVD
11 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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Revolution of Open-source and film making towards open film making
6 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Juillet 2013
Langue : English
Type : Texte
Autres articles (111)
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L’utiliser, en parler, le critiquer
10 avril 2011La première attitude à adopter est d’en parler, soit directement avec les personnes impliquées dans son développement, soit autour de vous pour convaincre de nouvelles personnes à l’utiliser.
Plus la communauté sera nombreuse et plus les évolutions seront rapides ...
Une liste de discussion est disponible pour tout échange entre utilisateurs. -
Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins
27 avril 2010, parMediaspip core
autoriser_auteur_modifier() afin que les visiteurs soient capables de modifier leurs informations sur la page d’auteurs -
Gestion de la ferme
2 mars 2010, parLa ferme est gérée dans son ensemble par des "super admins".
Certains réglages peuvent être fais afin de réguler les besoins des différents canaux.
Dans un premier temps il utilise le plugin "Gestion de mutualisation"
Sur d’autres sites (11794)
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Alias Artifacts
26 avril 2013, par Multimedia Mike — GeneralThroughout my own life, I have often observed that my own sense of nostalgia has a window that stretches about 10-15 years past from the current moment. Earlier this year, I discovered the show “Alias” and watched through the entire series thanks to Amazon Prime Instant Video (to be fair, I sort of skimmed the fifth and final season which I found to be horribly dull, or maybe franchise fatigue had set in). The show originally aired from 2001-2006 so I found that it fit well within the aforementioned nostalgia window.
But what was it, exactly, about the show that triggered nostalgia ? The computers, of course ! The show revolved around spies and espionage and cutting-edge technology necessarily played a role. The production designer for the series must have decided that Unix/Linux == awesome hacking and so many screenshots featured Linux.
Since this is still nominally a multimedia blog, I’ll start of the screenshot recon with an old multimedia player. Here is a vintage Mac OS desktop running an ancient web browser (probably Netscape) that’s playing a full-window video (probably QuickTime embedded directly into the browser).
Let’s jump right into the Linux side of things. This screenshot makes me particularly sentimental since this is exactly what a stock Linux/KDE desktop looked like circa 2001-2003 and is more or less what I would have worked with on my home computer at the time :
Studying that screenshot, we see that the user logs in as root, even to the desktop environment. Poor security practice ; I would expect better from a bunch of spooks.
Echelon
Look at the terminal output in the above screenshot– it’s building a program named Echelon, an omniscient spy tool inspired by a real-world surveillance network of the same name. In the show, Echelon is used to supply plot-convenient intelligence. At one point, some antagonists get their hands on the Echelon source code and seek to compile it. When they do, they will have access to the vast surveillance network. If you know anything about how computers work, don’t think about that too hard.Anyway, it’s interesting to note that Echelon is a properly autotool’d program– when the bad guys finally got Echelon, installation was just a ‘make install’ command away. The compilation was very user-friendly, though, as it would pop up a nice dialog box showing build progress :
Examining the build lines in both that screenshot and the following lines, we can see that Echelon cares about files such as common/db_err.c and bt_curadj.c :
A little googling reveals that these files both belong to the Berkeley DB library. That works ; I can imagine a program like this leveraging various database packages.
Computer Languages
The Echelon source code stuff comes from episode 2.11 : “A Higher Echelon”. While one faction had gotten a hold of the actual Echelon source code, a rival faction had abducted the show’s resident uber-nerd and, learning that they didn’t actually receive the Echelon code, force the nerd to re-write Echelon from scratch. Which he then proceeds to do…
The code he’s examining there appears to be C code that has something to do with joystick programming (JS_X_0, JS_Y_1, etc.). An eagle-eyed IMDb user contributed the trivia that he is looking at the file /usr/include/Linux/joystick.h.
Getting back to the plot, how could the bad buys possibly expect him to re-write a hugely complex piece of software from scratch ? You might think this is the height of absurdity for a computer-oriented story. You’ll be pleased to know that the writers agreed with that assessment since, when the program was actually executed, it claimed to be Echelon, but that broke into a game of Pong (or some simple game). Suddenly, it makes perfect sense why the guy was looking at the joystick header file.
This is the first bit of computer-oriented fun that I captured when I was watching the series :
This printout purports to be a “mainframe log summary”. After some plot-advancing text about a security issue, it proceeds to dump out some Java source code.
SSH
Secure Shell (SSH) frequently showed up. Here’s a screenshot in which a verbose ‘ssh -v’ connection has just been closed, while a telnet command has apparently just been launched (evidenced by “Escape character is ‘^]’.”) :
This is followed by some good old Hollywood Hacking in which a free-form database command is entered through any available command line interface :
I don’t remember the episode details, but I’m pretty sure the output made perfect sense to the character typing the command. Here’s another screenshot where the SSH client pops up an extra-large GUI dialog element to notify the user that it’s currently negotiating with the host :
Now that I look at that screenshot a little more closely, it appears to be a Win95/98 program. I wonder if there was an SSH client that actually popped up that gaudy dialog.
There’s a lot of gibberish in this screenshot and I wish I had written down some details about what it represented according to the episode’s plot :
It almost sounds like they were trying to break into a network computer. Analyzing MD5 structure… public key synthesized. To me, the funniest feature is the 7-digit public key. I’m a bit rusty on the math of the RSA cryptosystem, but intuitively, it seems that the public and private keys need to be of roughly equal lengths. I.e., the private key in this scenario would also be 7 digits long.
Gadgets
Various devices and gadgets were seen at various junctures in the show. Here’s a tablet computer from back when tablet computers seemed like fantastical (albeit stylus-requiring) devices– the Fujitsu Stylistic 2300 :
Here’s a videophone from an episode that aired in 2005. The specific model is the Packet8 DV326 (MSRP of US$500). As you can see from the screenshot, it can do 384 kbps both down and up.
I really regret not writing down the episode details surrounding this gadget. I just know that it was critical that the good guys get it and keep from falling into the hands of the bad guys.
As you can see, the (presumably) deadly device contains a Samsung chip and a Lexar chip. I have to wonder what device the production crew salvaged this from (probably just an old cell phone).
Other Programs
The GIMP photo editor makes an appearance while scrubbing security camera footage, and serves as the magical Enhance Button (at least they slung around the term “gamma”) :
I have no idea what MacOS-based audio editing program this is. Any ideas ?
FTP shows up in episode 2.12, “The Getaway”. It’s described as a “secure channel” for communication, which is quite humorous to anyone versed in internet technology.
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Video Processing via Bluetooth
16 juillet 2012, par kerim yucelThe application I am currently developing processes each frames using a native code and it should record the video as well. I tried SDK for this purpose but certain restrictions didn't allow me to do so, so I switched to NDK for a video recording code piece.
Apparently, my algorithm seriously uses CPU, upto %70 percent in the worst case. Before I actually start working on a video recorder, I wanted to try the following approach.
I will process the preview frames using an android phone and send it to another phone (which uses same application and same model) for recording. My questions are :
1.Should I try WiFi instead of Bluetooth ? I am developing the application for API 8 so I don't have WiFi-Direct, therefore I should do some socket programming, which would possibly complicate things a bit for me since Bluetooth can easily be set up using SDK.
2- Will I be available to record the frames as a video at the receiving end ? I will receive each frame with certain metadata embedded to it and should record them using the other phone. I doubt I will be able to do it using SDK, so NDK along with ffmpeg seems to be the best choice ? Any suggestions related to this question will be more than welcome.
3-Here comes the best part. I am recording the video with the lowest resolution that,after compressed, takes no more than 14mb space for a 10 minute long video. I have to reach the raw frames to send it to other end, encode and compress it. Any ideas related to possible flooding of Bluetooth/Wi-Fi because of big-sized raw frames ?
Any other approaches and answers will be much appreciated. Thanks.
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AAC encoder : Fix rate control on twoloop.
4 mai 2013, par Claudio Freire