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Autres articles (56)
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Websites made with MediaSPIP
2 mai 2011, parThis page lists some websites based on MediaSPIP.
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Creating farms of unique websites
13 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP 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" (...) -
Support audio et vidéo HTML5
10 avril 2011MediaSPIP utilise les balises HTML5 video et audio pour la lecture de documents multimedia en profitant des dernières innovations du W3C supportées par les navigateurs modernes.
Pour les navigateurs plus anciens, le lecteur flash Flowplayer est utilisé.
Le lecteur HTML5 utilisé a été spécifiquement créé pour MediaSPIP : il est complètement modifiable graphiquement pour correspondre à un thème choisi.
Ces technologies permettent de distribuer vidéo et son à la fois sur des ordinateurs conventionnels (...)
Sur d’autres sites (8696)
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Learn Multimedia Programming By Writing A JPEG Decoder
6 janvier 2011, par Multimedia Mike — ProgrammingFor those of you who hack on multimedia tech, how did you get started ? Did you begin by studying the mathematical underpinnings of multimedia codec algorithms ? Or did you find a practical problem and jump right in by writing code ? (Personally, I was always more of a nuts & bolts hacker than a math guy.) I ask because I occasionally get emails from aspiring multimedia hackers who want to know where to begin. Invariably, they want to go the math-first route. I heavily discourage this approach.
I have a crazy idea for anyone who wants a crash course on multimedia hacking : write a JPEG decoder. In doing so, you will be exposed to a lot of key domain concepts such as bitstream parsing, Huffman decoding, dequantization, zigzagging, the dreaded (inverse) discrete cosine transform, YUV vs. RGB colorspaces, macroblock organization, delta coding, and run length coding.
Sure, JPEG decoding is a solved problem. But that’s hardly the point. Why would you enter an unfamiliar field and hope to come up to speed on the basics by leaping straight into the domain’s unsolved problems ? If you are successful in this exercise, no one will ever use the fruits of your labor, but that doesn’t really matter.
So, do you want to learn multimedia hacking quickly ? Then grab a JPEG file (maybe create a few contrived ones that are small, have friendly dimensions, and feature predictable patterns), grab a good JPEG reference, and implement the decoding algorithm in the language and platform of your choice.
On the matter of the reference, my personal favorite reference has always been A note about the JPEG decoding algorithm by Cristi Cuturicu. The English grammar is a bit dodgy but overall, it might be the best reference you’ll find on the matter— as simple as it needs to be, but no simpler.
Good luck !
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Revisiting the Belco Alpha-400
26 août 2010, par Multimedia Mike — GeneralRelieved of the primary FATE maintenance duties, I decided to dust off my MIPS-based Belco Alpha-400 and try to get it doing FATE cycles. And just as I was about to get FATE running, I saw that Mans already got his MIPS-based Popcorn Hour device to run FATE. But here are my notes anyway.
Getting A Prompt
For my own benefit, I made a PDF to remind me precisely how to get a root prompt on the Alpha-400. The ‘jailbreak’ expression seems a little juvenile to me, but it seems to be in vogue right now.Toolchain
When I last tinkered with the Alpha-400, I was trying to build a toolchain that could build binaries to run on the unit’s MIPS chip, to no avail. Sometime last year, MichaelK put together x86_32-hosted toolchains that are able to build mipsel 32-bit binaries for Linux 2.4 and 2.6. The Alpha-400 uses a 2.4 kernel and the corresponding toolchain works famously for building current FFmpeg (--disable-devices
is necessary for building).FATE Samples
Next problem : Making the FATE suite available to the Alpha-400. I copied all of the FATE suite samples onto a VFAT-formatted SD card. The filename case is not preserved for all files which confounds me since it is preserved in other cases. I tried formatting the card for ext3 but the Alpha-400 would not mount it, even though /proc/filesystems lists ext3 (supporting an older version of ext3 ?).Alternative : Copy all of the FATE samples to the device’s rootfs. Space will be a little tight, though. Then again, there is over 600 MB of space free ; I misread earlier and thought there were only 300 MB free.
Remote Execution
To perform FATE cycles on a remote device, it helps to be able to SSH into that remote device. I don’t even want to know how complicated it would be to build OpenSSH for the device. However, the last time I brought up this topic, I learned about a lighter weight SSH replacement called Dropbear. It turns out that Dropbear runs great on this MIPS computer.Running FATE Remotely
I thought all the pieces would be in place to run FATE at this point. However, there is one more issue : Running FATE on a remote system requires that the host and the target are sharing a filesystem somehow. My personal favorite remote filesystem method is sshfs which is supposed to work wherever there is an SSH server. That’s not entirely true, though– sshfs also requires sftp-server to be installed on the server side, a program that Dropbear does not currently provide.I’m not even going to think about getting Samba or NFS server software installed on the Alpha-400. According to the unit’s /proc/filesystems file, nfs is a supported filesystem. I hate setting up NFS but may see if I can get that working anyway.
Residual Weirdness
The unit comes with the venerable Busybox program (BusyBox v1.4.1 (2007-06-01 20:37:18 CST) multi-call binary
) for most of its standard command line utilities. I noticed a quirk where BusyBox’s md5sum gives weird hex characters. This might be a known/fixed issue.Another item is that the Alpha-400′s /dev/null file only has rwxr-xr-x per default. This caused trouble when I first tried to scp using Dropbear using a newly-created, unprivileged user.
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Revision 29902 : - mise à jour de l’appel des #SAISIE (celles qui risquent un plantage en ...
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