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Autres articles (77)

  • Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins

    27 avril 2010, par

    Mediaspip core
    autoriser_auteur_modifier() afin que les visiteurs soient capables de modifier leurs informations sur la page d’auteurs

  • Publier sur MédiaSpip

    13 juin 2013

    Puis-je poster des contenus à partir d’une tablette Ipad ?
    Oui, si votre Médiaspip installé est à la version 0.2 ou supérieure. Contacter au besoin l’administrateur de votre MédiaSpip pour le savoir

  • 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 (8166)

  • ffmpeg c api for cutting video

    13 janvier 2012, par user1148080

    first thing sorry for my bad english, i'm making an android app that need to get part of a video, the idea is i need a method that get input a video file, start-time, end-time then cutting video from star-time to end-time and output to a new file, i get ffmpeg for android from http://bambuser.com/opensource and able to compile it, integrate with JNI, but now i dont know which ffmpeg's api to use for do the thing a need, any help, example are much appreciated.

  • Changes to the WebM Open Source License

    5 juin 2010, par noreply@blogger.com (John Luther)

    You’ll see on the WebM license page and in our source code repositories that we’ve made a small change to our open source license. There were a couple of issues that popped up after we released WebM at Google I/O a couple weeks ago, specifically around how the patent clause was written.

    As it was originally written, if a patent action was brought against Google, the patent license terminated. This provision itself is not unusual in an OSS license, and similar provisions exist in the 2nd Apache License and in version 3 of the GPL. The twist was that ours terminated "any" rights and not just rights to the patents, which made our license GPLv3 and GPLv2 incompatible. Also, in doing this, we effectively created a potentially new open source copyright license, something we are loath to do.

    Using patent language borrowed from both the Apache and GPLv3 patent clauses, in this new iteration of the patent clause we’ve decoupled patents from copyright, thus preserving the pure BSD nature of the copyright license. This means we are no longer creating a new open source copyright license, and the patent grant can exist on its own. Additionally, we have updated the patent grant language to make it clearer that the grant includes the right to modify the code and give it to others. (We’ve updated the licensing FAQ to reflect these changes as well.)

    We’ve also added a definition for the "this implementation" language, to make that more clear.

    Thanks for your patience as we worked through this, and we hope you like, enjoy and (most importantly) use WebM and join with us in creating more freedom online. We had a lot of help on these changes, so thanks to our friends in open source and free software who traded many emails, often at odd hours, with us.

    Chris DiBona is the Open Source Programs Manager at Google.

  • FFmpeg 0.6 ; Something About HTML5

    17 juin 2010, par Multimedia Mike — Open Source Multimedia

    The FFmpeg project made a formal release yesterday. You can download version 0.6 from the project’s download page.

    I’ve actually been seeing more news items about this today than I would have expected. This is most likely because the 0.6 release is named "Works with HTML5". Let it never be said that nerds don’t know marketing. The team really latched on to the hottest buzzword going right now.

    The name of the release refers to FFmpeg’s new native support for Google’s WebM format. It can mux and demux the WebM container, and decode the Vorbis audio, all natively (FFmpeg’s Vorbis encoder has been demoted to "experimental" for this release and it is recommended to enable libvorbis for encoding). But the big news is that this release can support Google’s libvpx natively for VP8 encoding and decoding, without having to apply any other patches.

    Getting libvpx to compile still might be a bit tricky. Fortunately, the first pass of a native, independent VP8 decoder is currently in review on the ffmpeg-devel list.