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  • Configurer la prise en compte des langues

    15 novembre 2010, par

    Accéder à la configuration et ajouter des langues prises en compte
    Afin de configurer la prise en compte de nouvelles langues, il est nécessaire de se rendre dans la partie "Administrer" du site.
    De là, dans le menu de navigation, vous pouvez accéder à une partie "Gestion des langues" permettant d’activer la prise en compte de nouvelles langues.
    Chaque nouvelle langue ajoutée reste désactivable tant qu’aucun objet n’est créé dans cette langue. Dans ce cas, elle devient grisée dans la configuration et (...)

  • Websites made ​​with MediaSPIP

    2 mai 2011, par

    This page lists some websites based on MediaSPIP.

  • Creating farms of unique websites

    13 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP platforms can be installed as a farm, with a single "core" hosted on a dedicated server and used by multiple websites.
    This allows (among other things) : implementation costs to be shared between several different projects / individuals rapid deployment of multiple unique sites creation of groups of like-minded sites, making it possible to browse media in a more controlled and selective environment than the major "open" (...)

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  • Flumotion Wins Streaming Media Europe Awards for WebM Streaming

    20 octobre 2010, par noreply@blogger.com (John Luther)

    Congratulations to our friends at Flumotion ! They picked up two Reader’s Choice Awards at the Streaming Media Europe 2010 conference in London. The company took prizes for Best Live Webcast of 2010 (for their streaming of GUADEC 2010 in WebM), and Best Webcast Platform. In addition, the Flumotion WebM Live Streaming solution was nominated for Best Streaming Innovation of 2010.

    You can read more about the awards in the Streaming Media announcement.

  • Gallery of VP8 Encoding Naivete

    15 octobre 2010, par Multimedia Mike — VP8

    I’ve been toiling away as a multimedia technology generalist for so long that it’s easy for me to forget that not everyone is as versed in the minutiae of the domain as I am. But I recently experienced what it’s like to be such an outsider when I posted about my toy VP8 encoder, expressing that it’s one of the hardest things I have ever tried to do. I heard of from number of people who do have extensive experience in video encoding, particularly with the H.264 and VP8 codecs. Their reactions were predictable : What’s so hard ? Look, you might be a little too immersed in the area to really understand a relative beginner’s perspective.

    And to all the people who suggested that I should get the encoder into FFmpeg ASAP : Are you crazy ?! Did you see what the first pass of the encoder produced ? Do you have lower standards than even I do ?



    Not Giving Up
    I worked a little more on the toy encoder. Remember that the above image is what I’m hoping to encode somewhat faithfully for this experiment. In my first pass, I attempted vertical prediction for all planes. For my next pass, I forced the chroma planes to mid-level (which results in a greyscale image) and played with the 16×16 luma prediction modes. When implementing an extremely naive algorithm to decide which 16×16 prediction mode would be the best for a particular block, this is what the program produced :



    For fun, here is what the image encodes to when forcing various prediction modes :

    I think the DC-only prediction mode actually looks a little better than the image that the naive algorithm produced :



    Vertical 16×16 prediction, similar to the image from the last post (just in black and white) :



    Horizontal 16×16 prediction :



    This is the 16×16 prediction mode unique to VP8, the TrueMotion mode (based on On2/Duck’s very first video codec) :



    Wow, these encodings really bring down the cheerful tone of the original image.

    Next Steps
    I have little reason to believe that I am encoding and subsequently reconstructing the image correctly (i.e., error is likely propagating through the entire encoding). If I have time, the next step is to validate my reconstruction against the encoder. Then I need to get the entropy considerations correct so that I actually get some compression out of this format.

  • nomenclature #2313 : déclaration pour spip3 : ’principale’

    12 septembre 2011, par cedric -

    C’est bien de cela qu’il s’agit. La valeur par défaut est ’oui’ si pas renseignée. La différence entre une table principale et une table auxiliaire dans SPIP ne concerne plus que la clé primaire en auto-incrément. On peut en théorie avoir un objet construit sur une table auxiliaire donc, même si (...)