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Médias (29)

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Autres articles (36)

  • Encoding and processing into web-friendly formats

    13 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP 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 (...)

  • Support de tous types de médias

    10 avril 2011

    Contrairement à beaucoup de logiciels et autres plate-formes modernes de partage de documents, MediaSPIP a l’ambition de gérer un maximum de formats de documents différents qu’ils soient de type : images (png, gif, jpg, bmp et autres...) ; audio (MP3, Ogg, Wav et autres...) ; vidéo (Avi, MP4, Ogv, mpg, mov, wmv et autres...) ; contenu textuel, code ou autres (open office, microsoft office (tableur, présentation), web (html, css), LaTeX, Google Earth) (...)

  • List of compatible distributions

    26 avril 2011, par

    The table below is the list of Linux distributions compatible with the automated installation script of MediaSPIP. Distribution nameVersion nameVersion number Debian Squeeze 6.x.x Debian Weezy 7.x.x Debian Jessie 8.x.x Ubuntu The Precise Pangolin 12.04 LTS Ubuntu The Trusty Tahr 14.04
    If you want to help us improve this list, you can provide us access to a machine whose distribution is not mentioned above or send the necessary fixes to add (...)

Sur d’autres sites (6678)

  • How Many Default Languages ?

    26 janvier 2012, par Multimedia Mike — Programming

    I was thinking back to my childhood, when my family first owned a computer. It was an MS-DOS-powered IBM PC. The default OS came with 2 programming environments, such as they were : GW-BASIC and batch files. It was a start, I suppose. I guess most any microcomputer you can name from that era came with some kind of BASIC interpreter. That defined the computer’s “out of the box” programmability.

    Then I started wondering how this compares to computers (operating systems/distributions, really) these days. So I installed a fresh version of the latest Ubuntu Linux version (11.10 as of this writing ; x86_32) and looked for programmability (without installing anything else). This is what I came up with :

    1. gcc/C (only the C compiler ; other components of the GNU compiler collection are installed separately)
    2. Perl
    3. Python
    4. C#, as furnished by Mono
    5. Bash — can’t forget about the shell as a full-featured programming language (sh is also present, but not t/csh)
    6. JavaScript — since Firefox is installed per default, JS counts
    7. GNU Assember — thanks to Reimar for the reminder that if gcc is present, gas necessarily needs to be there as well

    I checked on C++, Objective C, Java, Ada, Fortran, Go, Lua, Ruby, Tcl, PHP, R and other languages I could think of, but the above items were the only ones present by default. At the same time, I checked my Mac OS X (10.6) box and it also has Ruby and PHP installed. It has a bunch of other languages, courtesy of Xcode, so I can’t certify anything about its out of the box programmability.

    Still, I think “embarrassment of riches” pretty well sums it up. I try not to be crotchety old fogey complaining that kids these days don’t know how good they have it ; rather, I’m genuinely excited for anyone who wants to leap into computer programming in this day and age.

  • Anomalie #3749 (Nouveau) : Absence de proposition de mise à jour

    12 mars 2016, par Franck Dalot

    Bonjour
    SPIP 3.1.0 [22707] en prenant le zip ici : https://core.spip.net/projects/spip/wiki
    Prefix des tables : test19
    Installation en Mysql
    PHP Version 5.6.17 chez ovh
    Le htaccess.txt est toujours sous cette forme (en bref, il y en a pas)

    A savoir, le site de test n’est pas à la racine, mais dans un sous sous-dossier ! ( .../spip3/spip19 )
    Quand je vais dans l’espace privé de spip, je n’ai pas l’info comme quoi, la version 3.1.1 est dispo !
    Les taches cron "semblent" ok car le temps change, j’ai essayer "exécuter maintenant" et "réinitialiser la listes des travaux", mais rien n’y fait

    Le problème ne semble présent que sur la version 3.1 de spip, car sur un autre site en SPIP 3.0.21 [22462], j’ai bien le lien avec le message "La version 3.1.1 de SPIP est disponible"
    Concernant ce lien, il envoi vers http://files.spip.org/spip/ cela ne serait pas mieux qu’il dirige vers http://files.spip.net/spip/stable/ ?
    Franck

  • Http Live Streaming - Segmenting mp3 on Linux

    14 mai 2012, par krisbulman

    I simply want to segment an mp3 for HTTP Live Streaming in any linux distro (preferably CentOS) for the purpose of audio streaming to an iOS app.

    Out of the linux segmenters, I can get the following to compile in CentOS.

    1. http://wiki.andy-chu.com/doku.php?id=http_live_streaming (not sure last time this was updated)

    2. m3u8-segmenter on github (updated months ago)

    3. https://github.com/carsonmcdonald/HTTP-Live-Video-Stream-Segmenter-and-Distributor [ruby wrappers + c] (last updated 2 years ago, and a v2 branch 9 months old)

    In order to prep the file for segmenting, here is the ffmpeg conversion string to generate a valid ts file :

    $ ffmpeg -er 4 -i input.mp3 -f mpegts -acodec libmp3lame -ar 22050 -ab 32k -vn output.ts

    Each of the segmenters require various input switches, all quite simple, and all crash out with a seg fault. #2 actually does some segmenting, but faults after 56 segments every time. I've tried various mp3s with the same results. The issue queues for 2 & 3 are full, with no responses in months of the same issues.

    Others must be doing this in a live production environment that isn't running OSX.. what are your methods ?