Product: Sagitta Brutalis 1080 (PN S3480-GTX-1080-2697-128)
Software: Hashcat v3.00-beta-145-g069634a, Nvidia driver 367.18
Accelerator: 8x Nvidia GTX 1080 Founders Edition
Product: Sagitta Brutalis 1080 (PN S3480-GTX-1080-2697-128)
Software: Hashcat v3.00-beta-145-g069634a, Nvidia driver 367.18
Accelerator: 8x Nvidia GTX 1080 Founders Edition
See my DASH-IF presentation from October, 2014: | |
https://s3.amazonaws.com/misc.meltymedia/dash-if-reveal/index.html#/ | |
1. encode multiple bitrates with keyframe alignment: | |
ffmpeg -i ~/Movies/5D2_Portrait.MOV -s 1280x720 -c:v libx264 -b:v 1450k -bf 2 \ | |
-g 90 -sc_threshold 0 -c:a aac -strict experimental -b:a 96k -ar 32000 out.mp4 | |
My input was 30 fps = 3000 ms. If it were 29.97, then a GOP size of 90 frames will yield a base segment | |
size of 3003 milliseconds. You can make the segment size some multiple of this, e.g.: 6006, 9009, 12012. |
Article by Faruk Ateş, [originally on KuraFire.net][original] which is currently down
One of the most commonly overlooked and under-refined elements of a website is its pagination controls. In many cases, these are treated as an afterthought. I rarely come across a website that has decent pagination, and it always makes me wonder why so few manage to get it right. After all, I'd say that pagination is pretty easy to get right. Alas, that doesn't seem the case, so after encouragement from Chris Messina on Flickr I decided to write my Pagination 101, hopefully it'll give you some clues as to what makes good pagination.
Before going into analyzing good and bad pagination, I want to explain just what I consider to be pagination: Pagination is any kind of control system that lets the user browse through pages of search results, archives, or any other kind of continued content. Search results are the o