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Autres articles (30)

  • Use, discuss, criticize

    13 avril 2011, par

    Talk to people directly involved in MediaSPIP’s development, or to people around you who could use MediaSPIP to share, enhance or develop their creative projects.
    The bigger the community, the more MediaSPIP’s potential will be explored and the faster the software will evolve.
    A discussion list is available for all exchanges between users.

  • MediaSPIP Player : problèmes potentiels

    22 février 2011, par

    Le lecteur ne fonctionne pas sur Internet Explorer
    Sur Internet Explorer (8 et 7 au moins), le plugin utilise le lecteur Flash flowplayer pour lire vidéos et son. Si le lecteur ne semble pas fonctionner, cela peut venir de la configuration du mod_deflate d’Apache.
    Si dans la configuration de ce module Apache vous avez une ligne qui ressemble à la suivante, essayez de la supprimer ou de la commenter pour voir si le lecteur fonctionne correctement : /** * GeSHi (C) 2004 - 2007 Nigel McNie, (...)

  • MediaSPIP Player : les contrôles

    26 mai 2010, par

    Les contrôles à la souris du lecteur
    En plus des actions au click sur les boutons visibles de l’interface du lecteur, il est également possible d’effectuer d’autres actions grâce à la souris : Click : en cliquant sur la vidéo ou sur le logo du son, celui ci se mettra en lecture ou en pause en fonction de son état actuel ; Molette (roulement) : en plaçant la souris sur l’espace utilisé par le média (hover), la molette de la souris n’exerce plus l’effet habituel de scroll de la page, mais diminue ou (...)

Sur d’autres sites (6776)

  • Anomalie #3353 (Fermé) : Un warning PHP en moins sur les $GLOBALS[’debug’][’aucasou’]

    25 novembre 2014, par Ybbet SPIP

    Sur http://core.spip.org/projects/spip/repository/entry/branches/spip-3.0/ecrire/req/mysql.php#L185 on a souvent des warnings.
    Mettre isset($GLOBALS['debug']['aucasou']) suffit pour régler le problème.

    (c’est un report de http://core.spip.org/projects/spip/repository/entry/spip/ecrire/req/mysql.php#L217 )

  • The neutering of Google Code-In 2011

    23 octobre 2011, par Dark Shikari — development, GCI, google, x264

    Posting this from the Google Summer of Code Mentor Summit, at a session about Google Code-In !

    Google Code-In is the most innovative open-source program I’ve ever seen. It provided a way for students who had never done open source — or never even done programming — to get involved in open source work. It made it easy for people who weren’t sure of their ability, who didn’t know whether they could do open source, to get involved and realize that yes, they too could do amazing work — whether code useful to millions of people, documentation to make the code useful, translations to make it accessible, and more. Hundreds of students had a great experience, learned new things, and many stayed around in open source projects afterwards because they enjoyed it so much !

    x264 benefitted greatly from Google Code-In. Most of the high bit depth assembly code was written through GCI — literally man-weeks of work by an professional developer, done by high-schoolers who had never written assembly before ! Furthermore, we got loads of bugs fixed in ffmpeg/libav, a regression test tool, and more. And best of all, we gained a new developer : Daniel Kang, who is now a student at MIT, an x264 and libav developer, and has gotten paid work applying the skills he learned in Google Code-In !

    Some students in GCI complained about the system being “unfair”. Task difficulties were inconsistent and there were many ways to game the system to get lots of points. Some people complained about Daniel — he was completing a staggering number of tasks, so they must be too easy. Yet many of the other students considered these tasks too hard. I mean, I’m asking high school students to write hundreds of lines of complicated assembly code in one of the world’s most complicated instruction sets, and optimize it to meet extremely strict code-review standards ! Of course, there may have been valid complaints about other projects : I did hear from many students talking about gaming the system and finding the easiest, most “profitable” tasks. Though, with the payout capped at $500, the only prize for gaming the system is a high rank on the points list.

    According to people at the session, in an effort to make GCI more “fair”, Google has decided to change the system. There are two big changes they’re making.

    Firstly, Google is requiring projects to submit tasks on only two dates : the start, and the halfway point. But in Google Code-In, we certainly had no idea at the start what types of tasks would be the most popular — or new ideas that came up over time. Often students would come up with ideas for tasks, which we could then add ! A waterfall-style plan-everything-in-advance model does not work for real-world coding. The halfway point addition may solve this somewhat, but this is still going to dramatically reduce the number of ideas that can be proposed as tasks.

    Secondly, Google is requiring projects to submit at least 5 tasks of each category just to apply. Quality assurance, translation, documentation, coding, outreach, training, user interface, and research. For large projects like Gnome, this is easy : they can certainly come up with 5 for each on such a large, general project. But often for a small, focused project, some of these are completely irrelevant. This rules out a huge number of smaller projects that just don’t have relevant work in all these categories. x264 may be saved here : as we work under the Videolan umbrella, we’ll likely be able to fudge enough tasks from Videolan to cover the gaps. But for hundreds of other organizations, they are going to be out of luck. It would make more sense to require, say, 5 out of 8 of the categories, to allow some flexibility, while still encouraging interesting non-coding tasks.

    For example, what’s “user interface” for a software library with a stable API, say, a libc ? Can you make 5 tasks out of it that are actually useful ?

    If x264 applied on its own, could you come up with 5 real, meaningful tasks in each category for it ? It might be possible, but it’d require a lot of stretching.

    How many smaller or more-focused projects do you think are going to give up and not apply because of this ?

    Is GCI supposed to be something for everyone, or just or Gnome, KDE, and other megaprojects ?

  • Softwares for adding real time text to a video [on hold]

    30 juillet 2013, par user763410

    I am trying to add real time text (like weather information, stock quotes) to a video and broadcast it. My videos are going to be 2 hours long. I have been searching for decent softwares which can do the work for me. FFmpeg can do overlays only if text to be added is available fully before running ffmpeg code, so its not real time. I have not been able to able to get gstreamer to work on my hardware.

    So, My question is :
    Please suggest some softwares which can add (text)data to a video in real time.
    Please don't post comparisons as that will trigger moderator's anger ! I don't want to start a flame war. Purpose of the question is to make a list. Btw, this should work from command line rather than a GUI.

    (Ps : If the question is closed because of being "not cnonstructive, please answer it on my google docs page here.
    http://goo.gl/14dR2H)

    Thanks very much in advance.