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Encoding and processing into web-friendly formats
13 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP 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 (...) -
Emballe médias : à quoi cela sert ?
4 février 2011, parCe plugin vise à gérer des sites de mise en ligne de documents de tous types.
Il crée des "médias", à savoir : un "média" est un article au sens SPIP créé automatiquement lors du téléversement d’un document qu’il soit audio, vidéo, image ou textuel ; un seul document ne peut être lié à un article dit "média" ; -
Contribute to a better visual interface
13 avril 2011MediaSPIP is based on a system of themes and templates. Templates define the placement of information on the page, and can be adapted to a wide range of uses. Themes define the overall graphic appearance of the site.
Anyone can submit a new graphic theme or template and make it available to the MediaSPIP community.
Sur d’autres sites (6557)
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Announcing Piwik Community Meetup in Munich : Register now !
5 mai 2014, par Piwik Core TeamWe’re excited to announce our second Piwik community Meetup ! This will be a unique opportunity to connect with other Piwik users, and meet the core team behind Piwik.
Updated : presentation slides
The Making Of The Analytics Platform Of The Future
Piwik in Enterprise
Piwik Analytics Platform
Guest lecture : TV to Web Analytics
Guest lecture : Oxid analytics with Piwik
When and where is the meetup ? (update, see below)
Location : Munich, Germany
Date : Tuesday July 29th 2014
Time : 5PM
Language : German/English
Cost : Free !Who can join ?
All Piwik community members (users, translators, contributors) are warmly invited to join the meetup. Almost all of the core team will be present, we’re looking forward to meeting you !
What to expect for the Piwik meetup ?
The meetup will consist of three speakers giving quick 15-20 minute presentations followed by Q&A.
- Discover some of the upcoming features
- Learn tricks to make the most out of Piwik
- Networking and socialising… and an after party in a local bar to continue the discussion !
Who can join the meetup ?
This meetup is open to all Piwik users and members of the community.
- If you are using Piwik to improve your websites and apps, or generally curious about digital analytics and marketing
- If you are interested in the platform, integrating your app with Piwik or building plugins, come meet with other developers and creators of Piwik
Timing
- Doors open at 17:00
- Starts at 17:30
- Ends at 20:00 – 20:30
Schedule
- 17:30 – Welcome speech (Peter Boehlke (german))
- 17:40 – Piwik for governments & corporations – Piwik PRO case study (Maciej Zawadziński english)
- 18:05 – Break (25 minutes) – Coffee, Tea, pastries and cold buffet (free)
- 18:30 – Overview of the platform Piwik, custom data tracking, publishing on the new Marketplace (Thomas Steur (german))
- 18:55 – Break (10 minutes)
- 19:05 – Piwik users present interesting real world use cases (german)
– TV-to-Web analytics (Jasper Sasse)
– Piwik from a SEO’s perspective (Thomas Zeithaml)
– Using the Piwik Framework to analyze Shop-Data (Joachim Barthel) - 19:30 – Break (10 minutes)
- 19:40 – Next big features, milestones, future roadmap (Matthieu Aubry english)
- 20:05 – Break (5 minutes)
- 20:10 – Summary & end of the conference (german)
- After party at a nearby bar or restaurant (open end)
Call for Papers
We would like to hear about how you use Piwik ! If you’d like to present your interesting use case on the conference (speaking time 5 to 7 minutes), please contact us at hello@piwik.org !
Meetup location
Munich Workstyle
Landwehrstraße 61
80336 München
Location / DirectionsParking space is limited : We recommend to use public transport !
Stations nearby :
S-Bahn : Hauptbahnhof, Stachus (both 700m)
U-Bahn : Stachus (700m), Theresienwiese (400m)
Beverage pricing
Mineral water : EUR 3,10 (0,75l)
Softdrinks / juices : EUR 2,10
Beer : EUR 2,80
A special thank you to our sponsor Mayflower GmbH !
Register now
Seats are limited, please register today to secure your seat :
Register now ! -
Announcing Piwik Community Meetup in Munich : Register now !
5 mai 2014, par Piwik Core TeamWe’re excited to announce our second Piwik community Meetup ! This will be a unique opportunity to connect with other Piwik users, and meet the core team behind Piwik.
Updated : presentation slides
The Making Of The Analytics Platform Of The Future
Piwik in Enterprise
Piwik Analytics Platform
Guest lecture : TV to Web Analytics
Guest lecture : Oxid analytics with Piwik
When and where is the meetup ? (update, see below)
Location : Munich, Germany
Date : Tuesday July 29th 2014
Time : 5PM
Language : German/English
Cost : Free !Who can join ?
All Piwik community members (users, translators, contributors) are warmly invited to join the meetup. Almost all of the core team will be present, we’re looking forward to meeting you !
What to expect for the Piwik meetup ?
The meetup will consist of three speakers giving quick 15-20 minute presentations followed by Q&A.
- Discover some of the upcoming features
- Learn tricks to make the most out of Piwik
- Networking and socialising… and an after party in a local bar to continue the discussion !
Who can join the meetup ?
This meetup is open to all Piwik users and members of the community.
- If you are using Piwik to improve your websites and apps, or generally curious about digital analytics and marketing
- If you are interested in the platform, integrating your app with Piwik or building plugins, come meet with other developers and creators of Piwik
Timing
- Doors open at 17:00
- Starts at 17:30
- Ends at 20:00 – 20:30
Schedule
- 17:30 – Welcome speech (Peter Boehlke (german))
- 17:40 – Piwik for governments & corporations – Piwik PRO case study (Maciej Zawadziński english)
- 18:05 – Break (25 minutes) – Coffee, Tea, pastries and cold buffet (free)
- 18:30 – Overview of the platform Piwik, custom data tracking, publishing on the new Marketplace (Thomas Steur (german))
- 18:55 – Break (10 minutes)
- 19:05 – Piwik users present interesting real world use cases (german)
– TV-to-Web analytics (Jasper Sasse)
– Piwik from a SEO’s perspective (Thomas Zeithaml)
– Using the Piwik Framework to analyze Shop-Data (Joachim Barthel) - 19:30 – Break (10 minutes)
- 19:40 – Next big features, milestones, future roadmap (Matthieu Aubry english)
- 20:05 – Break (5 minutes)
- 20:10 – Summary & end of the conference (german)
- After party at a nearby bar or restaurant (open end)
Call for Papers
We would like to hear about how you use Piwik ! If you’d like to present your interesting use case on the conference (speaking time 5 to 7 minutes), please contact us at hello@piwik.org !
Meetup location
Munich Workstyle
Landwehrstraße 61
80336 München
Location / DirectionsParking space is limited : We recommend to use public transport !
Stations nearby :
S-Bahn : Hauptbahnhof, Stachus (both 700m)
U-Bahn : Stachus (700m), Theresienwiese (400m)
Beverage pricing
Mineral water : EUR 3,10 (0,75l)
Softdrinks / juices : EUR 2,10
Beer : EUR 2,80
A special thank you to our sponsor Mayflower GmbH !
Register now
Seats are limited, please register today to secure your seat :
Register now ! -
Dreamcast SD Adapter and DreamShell
31 décembre 2014, par Multimedia Mike — Sega DreamcastNope ! I’m never going to let go of the Sega Dreamcast hacking. When I was playing around with Dreamcast hacking early last year, I became aware that there is such a thing as an SD card adapter for the DC that plugs into the port normally reserved for the odd DC link cable. Of course I wanted to see what I could do with it.
The primary software that leverages the DC SD adapter is called DreamShell. Working with this adapter and the software requires some skill and guesswork. Searching for these topics tends to turn up results from various forums where people are trying to cargo-cult their way to solutions. I have a strange feeling that this post might become the unofficial English-language documentation on the matter.
Use Cases
What can you do with this thing ? Undoubtedly, the primary use is for backing up (ripping) the contents of GD-ROMs (the custom optical format used for the DC) and playing those backed up (ripped) copies. Presumably, users of this device leverage the latter use case more than the former, i.e., download ripped games, load them on the SD card, and launch them using DreamShell.However, there are other uses such as multimedia playback, system exploration, BIOS reprogramming, high-level programming, and probably a few other things I haven’t figured out yet.
Delivery
I put in an order via the dc-sd.com website and in about 2 short months, the item arrived from China. This marked my third lifetime delivery from China and curiously, all 3 of the shipments have pertained to the Sega Dreamcast.
I thought it was very interesting that this adapter came in such complete packaging. The text is all in Chinese, though the back states “Windows 98 / ME / 2000 / XP, Mac OS 9.1, LINUX2.4”. That’s what tipped me off that they must have just cannibalized some old USB SD card readers and packaging in order to create these. Closer inspection of the internals through the translucent pink case confirms this.
Usage
According to its change log, DreamShell has been around for a long time with version 1.0.0 released in February of 2004. The current version is 4.0.0 RC3. There are several downloads available :- DreamShell 4.0 RC 3 CDI Image
- DreamShell 4.0 RC 3 + Boot Loader
- DreamShell 4.0 RC 3 + Core CDI image
Option #2 worked for me. It contains a CDI disc image and the DreamShell files in a directory named DS/.
Burn the CDI to a CD-R in the normal way you would burn a bootable Dreamcast disc from a CDI image. This is open-ended and left as an exercise to the reader, since there are many procedures depending on platform. On Linux, I used a small script I found once called burncdi-dc.sh.
Then, copy the contents of the DS/ folder to an SD card. As for filesystem, FAT16 and FAT32 are both known to work. The files in DS/ should land in the root of the SD card ; the folder DS/ should not be in the root.
Plug the SD card into the DC SD adapter and plug the adapter in the link cable port on the back of the Dreamcast. Then, boot the disc. If it works, you will see this minor corruption of the usual Sega licensing screen :
Then, there will be a brief white-on-black text screen that explains the booting process :
Then, there will be the main DreamShell logo :
Finally, you will land on the DreamShell main desktop :
Skepticism
At first, I was supremely skeptical of the idea that this SD adapter could perform speedily enough to play games reasonably. This was predicated on the observation that my DC coder’s cable that I used to use for homebrew development could not transfer faster than 115200 bits/second, amounting to about 11 kbytes/sec. I assumed that this was a fundamental limitation of the link port.In fact, I ripped a few of my Dreamcast discs over a decade ago and still have those rips lying around. So I copied the ISO image of Resident Evil : Code Veronica — the game I personally played most on the DC — to the SD card (anywhere works) and used the “ISO loader” icon seen on the desktop above to launch the game.
It works :
The opening FMV plays at full speed. Everything loads as fast as I remember. I was quite surprised.
Digression : My assumptions about serial speeds have often been mistaken. 10 years ago, I heard stories about how we would soon be able to watch streaming video on our cell phones. I scoffed because I thought the 56K limitation of dialup modems was some sort of fundamental speed-of-light type of limitation for telephony bandwidth, wired or wireless.
The desktop menu also includes a ‘speedtest’ tool that profiles the write and read performance of your preferred storage medium. For my fastest SD card (a PNY 2 GB card) :
This is probably more representative of the true adapter bandwidth as reading and writing is a good deal faster through more modern interfaces on PC and Mac with this same card.
Look at the other options on the speedtest console. Hard drive ? Apparently, it’s possible, but it requires a good deal more hardware hacking than just purchasing this SD adapter.
Ripping
As you can see from the Resident Evil screenshot, playing games works quite nicely. How about ripping ? I’m pleased to say that DreamShell has a beautiful ripping interface :
Enter a name for the disc (or read the disc label), select the storage medium, and let it, well, rip. It indicates which track it’s working on and the Sega logo acts as a progress bar, shading blue as the track rip progresses.
I’m finally, efficiently, archiving that collection of Sega Dreamcast demo discs ; I’m hoping they’ll eventually find a home at the Internet Archive. How is overall ripping performance ? Usually about 38-40 minutes to rip a full 900-1000 MB. That certainly beats the 27-28 hours that were required when I performed the ripping at 11 kbytes/sec via the DC coders cable.
All is well until I get a sector reading error :
That’s when it can come in handy to have 3 DC consoles (see ?! not crazy !).
Other Uses
There’s a file explorer. You can browse the filesystem of the SD card, visual memory unit, or the CD portion of the GD-ROM (would be more useful if it accessed the GD area). There are FFmpeg files included. So I threw a random Cinepak file and random MPEG-1 file at it to see what happens. MPEG-1 didn’t do anything, but this Cinepak file from some Sierra game played handily :
If you must enter strings, it helps to have a Dreamcast keyboard (which I do). Failing that, here’s a glimpse of the onscreen keyboard that DreamShell equips :
Learning to use it is a game in itself.
There is an option of installing DreamShell in the BIOS. I did not attempt this. I don’t know if it’s possible (not like there’s a lot of documentation)– perhaps a custom BIOS modchip is needed. But here’s what the screen looks like :
There is also a plain console to interact with (better have a physical keyboard). There are numerous file manipulation commands and custom system interaction commands. I see one interesting command called ‘addr’ that looks useful for dumping memory regions to a file.
A Lua language interpreter is also built in. I would love to play with this if I could ascertain whether DreamShell provided Dreamcast-specific APIs.
Tips And Troubleshooting
I have 3 Dreamcast consoles, affectionately named Terran, Protoss, and Zerg after the StarCraft II stickers with which they are adorned. Some seem to work better than others. Protoss seemed to be able to boot the DreamShell disc more reliably than the others. However, I was alarmed when it couldn’t boot one morning when it was churning the previous day.I think the problem is that it was just cold. That seemed to be the issue. I put in a normal GD-ROM and let it warm up on that disc for awhile and then DreamShell booted fine. So that’s my piece of cargo-culting troubleshooting advice.