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Richard Stallman et le logiciel libre
19 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Mai 2013
Langue : français
Type : Texte
Autres articles (78)
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Gestion des droits de création et d’édition des objets
8 février 2011, parPar défaut, beaucoup de fonctionnalités sont limitées aux administrateurs mais restent configurables indépendamment pour modifier leur statut minimal d’utilisation notamment : la rédaction de contenus sur le site modifiables dans la gestion des templates de formulaires ; l’ajout de notes aux articles ; l’ajout de légendes et d’annotations sur les images ;
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Des sites réalisés avec MediaSPIP
2 mai 2011, parCette page présente quelques-uns des sites fonctionnant sous MediaSPIP.
Vous pouvez bien entendu ajouter le votre grâce au formulaire en bas de page. -
Dépôt de média et thèmes par FTP
31 mai 2013, parL’outil MédiaSPIP traite aussi les média transférés par la voie FTP. Si vous préférez déposer par cette voie, récupérez les identifiants d’accès vers votre site MédiaSPIP et utilisez votre client FTP favori.
Vous trouverez dès le départ les dossiers suivants dans votre espace FTP : config/ : dossier de configuration du site IMG/ : dossier des média déjà traités et en ligne sur le site local/ : répertoire cache du site web themes/ : les thèmes ou les feuilles de style personnalisées tmp/ : dossier de travail (...)
Sur d’autres sites (7244)
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Chrome’s New Audio Notifier
30 janvier 2014, par Multimedia Mike — GeneralVersion 32 of Google’s Chrome web browser introduced this nifty feature :
When a browser tab has an element that is producing audio, the browser’s tab shows the above audio notification icon to inform the user. I have seen that people have a few questions about this, specifically :
- How does this feature work ?
- Why wasn’t this done sooner ?
- Are other browsers going to follow suit ?
Short answers : 1) Chrome offers a new plugin API that the Flash Player is now using, as are Chrome’s internal media playing facilities ; 2) this feature was contingent on the new plugin infrastructure mentioned in the previous answer ; 3) other browsers would require the same infrastructure support.
Longer answers follow…
Plugin History
Plugins were originally based on the Netscape Plugin API. This was developed in the early 1990s in order to support embedding PDFs into the Netscape web browser. The NPAPI does things like providing graphics contexts for drawing and input processing, and mediate network requests through the browser’s network facilities.What NPAPI doesn’t do is handle audio. In the early-mid 1990s, audio support was not a widespread consideration in the consumer PC arena. Due to the lack of audio API support, if a plugin wanted to play audio, it had to go outside of the plugin framework.
There are a few downsides to this approach :
- If a plugin wants to play audio, it needs to access unique audio APIs on each supported platform. One of the most famous things I’ve ever written deals concerns this nightmare on Linux. (The picture worth a thousand words.)
- Plugin necessarily needs free unrestricted access to system facilities, i.e., security measures like sandboxing become more difficult without restricting functionality.
- Since the browser doesn’t mediate access to the audio APIs, the browser can’t reasonably be expected to know when a plugin is accessing the audio resources.
So that last item hopefully answers the question of why it has been so difficult for NPAPI-supporting browsers to implement what seems like it would be simple functionality, like implementing a per-tab audio notifier.
Plugin Future
Since Google released Chrome in an effort to facilitate advancements on the client side of the internet, they have made numerous efforts to modernize various legacy aspects of web technology. These efforts include the SPDY protocol, Native Client, WebM/WebP, and something call the Pepper Plugin API (PPAPI). This is a more modern take on the classic plugin architecture to supplant the aging NPAPI :
Right away, we see that the job of the plugin writer is greatly simplified. Where was this API years ago when I was writing my API jungle piece ?
The Linux version of Chrome was apparently the first version that packaged the Pepper version of the Flash Player (doing so fixed an obnoxious bug in the Linux Flash Player interaction with GTK). Now, it looks like Windows and Mac have followed suit. Digging into the Chrome directory on a Windows 7 installation :
AppData\Local\Google\Chrome\Application[version]\PepperFlash\pepflashplayer.dll
This directory exists for version 31 as well, which is still hanging around my system.
So, to re-iterate : Chrome has a new plugin API that plugins use to access the audio API. Chrome knows when the API is accessed and that allows the browser to display the audio notifier on a tab.
Other Browsers
What about other browsers ? “Mozilla is not interested in or working on Pepper at this time. See the Chrome Pepper pages.” -
Remove obsolete and streamline code due to the new redirect option and the HTML5 download attribute for the file download links.
13 février 2012, par Sebastian Tschanm js/main.js Remove obsolete and streamline code due to the new redirect option and the HTML5 download attribute for the file download links.
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Move PS2 MMI code below the mips subdirectory, where it belongs.
7 février 2012, par Diego BiurrunMove PS2 MMI code below the mips subdirectory, where it belongs.