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Subject: 
Re: Lego Star Wars on Cartoon Network
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.mediawatch, lugnet.publish
Date: 
Fri, 13 May 2005 15:14:23 GMT
Viewed: 
4870 times
  
In lugnet.mediawatch, Dan Boger wrote:
On Fri, May 13, 2005 at 02:34:17PM +0000, Larry Pieniazek wrote:
I've uploaded the movie to my webserver--

see it here--

http://sparky.i989.net/media/video/RevengeOfTheBrick_Web.mov

It's the 26 meg .mov version

(if you could be nice to my little web server and save this on your
local system before viewing, it'd be appreciated)

I'm confused - from the webserver's perspective, what's the difference?

This is going a little back, but I read that streaming media from a webserver
takes up more bandwidth than just downloading and viewing locally.  Things may
have changed.  And, for myself, I like keeping these things anyway, so I save
where I can instead of streaming, anyway.


Hm.. is there a way to force that behaviour (short of renaming the
extension to not be .mov?) That would be a nifty trick. It seems like
there is a way to force the reverse, that is, there are pages that
launch the player IN a new page when you click on the link and don't
(easily) let you save.

With apache, it should be doable - basically override the mime-type for
.mov files in that directory, maybe even for that particular file.

This is the level of ignorance on my side--I thought it would be a client-side
thing--anytime your browser hits an extension like .mov, display with quicktime.

I've looked at my Apache conf file and there's no associations with .mov's, so I
just assumed it was a client-side thing.



For IIS, I'm not the guy to talk to :)

Dave K



Message has 1 Reply:
  Re: Lego Star Wars on Cartoon Network
 
(...) Huh - I'd be surprised if that is the case. And yes, I usually save stuff locally too. (...) Both ends work together here. Apache tells the client that the file has a content-type of video/quicktime, then the client decides if it knows how to (...) (20 years ago, 13-May-05, to lugnet.mediawatch, lugnet.publish)

Message is in Reply To:
  Re: Lego Star Wars on Cartoon Network
 
(...) I'm confused - from the webserver's perspective, what's the difference? (...) With apache, it should be doable - basically override the mime-type for .mov files in that directory, maybe even for that particular file. For IIS, I'm not the guy (...) (20 years ago, 13-May-05, to lugnet.mediawatch, lugnet.publish)

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