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Médias (1)
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Video d’abeille en portrait
14 mai 2011, par
Mis à jour : Février 2012
Langue : français
Type : Video
Autres articles (102)
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Publier sur MédiaSpip
13 juin 2013Puis-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 -
Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins
27 avril 2010, parMediaspip core
autoriser_auteur_modifier() afin que les visiteurs soient capables de modifier leurs informations sur la page d’auteurs -
Soumettre bugs et patchs
10 avril 2011Un logiciel n’est malheureusement jamais parfait...
Si vous pensez avoir mis la main sur un bug, reportez le dans notre système de tickets en prenant bien soin de nous remonter certaines informations pertinentes : le type de navigateur et sa version exacte avec lequel vous avez l’anomalie ; une explication la plus précise possible du problème rencontré ; si possibles les étapes pour reproduire le problème ; un lien vers le site / la page en question ;
Si vous pensez avoir résolu vous même le bug (...)
Sur d’autres sites (7922)
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How to upload files to Azure Blob Stotage like FTP ?
25 janvier 2016, par CG-GuyI am able to upload files from my
ffmpeg
app to an FTP using this path :ftp://[user:password]@server[:port]/MyFolder/video/video.flv
How do I achieve the same thing in Azure Blob ? I have tried this path :
https://[account-name].blob.core.windows.net/video/video.flv /DestKey:[account-storage-key]
But that doesn’t seem to work. TCP connection shows the app is making a connection with the Azure account to the remote address
104.208.XXX.XX
and remote port443
. However, it drops the connection and starts attempts to reconnect repeatedly. It will then time out after countless attempts and crash the app. I have also tried/>
without success. The same thing happens. It attempts connecting to the remote address and port80
.The FFMPEG app has full access to firewall ports and the app communication shell show files are published without errors. System is a Server 2008 R2 unit on-site, not VM.
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dnxhddec : Decode and use interlace mb flag
26 septembre 2015, par Christophe Gisquetdnxhddec : Decode and use interlace mb flag
This bit is 1 in some samples, and seems to coincide with interlaced
mbs and CID1260. 2008 specs do not know about it, and maintain qscale
is 11 bits. This looks oversized, but may help larger bitdepths.Currently, it leads to an obviously incorrect qscale value, meaning
its syntax is shifted by 1. However, reading 11 bits also leads to
obviously incorrect decoding : qscale seems to be 10 bits.However, as most profiles still have 11bits qscale, the feature is
restricted to the CID1260 profile (this flag is dependent on
a higher-level flag located in the header).The encoder writes 12 bits of syntax, last and first bits always 0,
which is now somewhat inconsistent with the decoder, but ends up with
the same effect (progressive + reserved bit).Signed-off-by : Vittorio Giovara <vittorio.giovara@gmail.com>
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dnxhddec : Decode and use interlace mb flag
26 septembre 2015, par Christophe Gisquetdnxhddec : Decode and use interlace mb flag
This bit is 1 in some samples, and seems to coincide with interlaced
mbs and CID1260. 2008 specs do not know about it, and maintain qscale
is 11 bits. This looks oversized, but may help larger bitdepths.Currently, it leads to an obviously incorrect qscale value, meaning
its syntax is shifted by 1. However, reading 11 bits also leads to
obviously incorrect decoding : qscale seems to be 10 bits.However, as most profiles still have 11bits qscale, the feature is
restricted to the CID1260 profile (this flag is dependent on
a higher-level flag located in the header).The encoder writes 12 bits of syntax, last and first bits always 0,
which is now somewhat inconsistent with the decoder, but ends up with
the same effect (progressive + reserved bit).Signed-off-by : Vittorio Giovara <vittorio.giovara@gmail.com>