Talks: Difference between revisions
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= Requested = |
== Requested == |
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* Michael Geist |
* Michael Geist |
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** Canadian Law and Technologist Blogger |
** Canadian Law and Technologist Blogger |
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** Bruce Campbell [IST] |
** Bruce Campbell [IST] |
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= Encoding = |
== Encoding == |
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We use dvgrab to rip the talks from the camera and ffmpeg to encode. |
We use dvgrab to rip the talks from the camera and ffmpeg to encode. |
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= Mirrors = |
== Mirrors == |
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* taurine (90 Mbps) [It can probably push much more if it were on a gigabit link] |
* taurine (90 Mbps) [It can probably push much more if it were on a gigabit link] |
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* citric-acid (250 Mbps) |
* citric-acid (250 Mbps) |
Revision as of 01:44, 9 January 2008
Requested
- Michael Geist
- Canadian Law and Technologist Blogger
- Wayne Beaton
- Technical Evangelist for The Eclipse Foundation
- Keith Packard
- X Windows
- Holden has contacted him again to ask him to come in October
- Walter Bright
- D Programming Language
- Hans Peter Anvin
- Linux kernel hacker
- Cory Doctorow
- Co-editor of Boing Boing
- CSCF/MFCF/IST Open Forum
- Dave Gawley [CSCF]
- Dawn Keenan [IST]
- Jim Pell [MFCF]
- Stephen Mann [SCS]
- Bruce Campbell [IST]
Encoding
We use dvgrab to rip the talks from the camera and ffmpeg to encode.
Mirrors
- taurine (90 Mbps) [It can probably push much more if it were on a gigabit link]
- citric-acid (250 Mbps)
- natural-flavours (200 Mbps)
- artificial-flavours (200 Mbps)
- perpugilliam (90 Mbps)
The list of mirrors can be found in /users/www/mirrors.txt; the web server selects a random mirror from this list at each file request. We now run Net-SNMP on all of our hosts, so we have real-time access to network and cpu load data. We should therefore be able to write a more intelligent mirror selection script. We also use mirror.cs to mirror on-campus.
We are currently looking at QoS tagging to reduce the load on campus switches/routers.