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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
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Message has 1 Reply: | | Re: Lego Star Wars on Cartoon Network
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| (...) 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)
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Message is in Reply To:
| | Re: Lego Star Wars on Cartoon Network
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| (...) 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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