Cortado (software)

Cortado is a streaming Java applet for Ogg formats Vorbis, Theora and Kate, μ-law, MJPEG and Smoke (a custom MJPEG variant), released under the GPL. With Cortado a webpage can be set up to download the applet on the fly in the background, providing embedded support for Ogg-based media in Java-enabled web browsers without the need to install further software. Among others it has been used on Wikimedia projects and blip.tv.[1]

Cortado was originally created by Wim Taymans building upon the earlier work of Jorbis, the Java decoder for Vorbis audio. Cortado was then maintained in the Wikimedia SVN repository by MediaWiki software developer Tim Starling and was available here.

Since release 0.5.0 development is done at the Xiph.org foundation. Cortado reference web page is available on Xiph.org web site, development version can be obtained from Xiph.org Cortado git source, while stable versions are available at Cortado stable releases. A README file is available at Cortado README from git HEAD.

ITheora

ITheora is a PHP wrapper for Cortado intended to make it easier for the end-user to embed Ogg video in websites. ITheora is free software under the GNU General Public License.

Distributed Multi-Media DataBase

dmmdb is a YouTube-like directory of online videos. It uses a modified version of Cortado.[2][3][4][5][6]

gollark: You could detect it, you couldn't verify correctness.
gollark: I guess you could just have `unsafe`/`average_c` blocks for that.
gollark: Pointer arithmetic, for one thing?
gollark: Rust was designed with ownership to start with and still can't satisfactorily chëck everything. C code is typically a horrible minefield of unsafe everything so a borrow checker could have problems.
gollark: > someone, quick! a borrow checker for C<@356107472269869058> Isn't that impossible without stupidly high false positive rates and/or missing many unsound things?

See also

  • Fluendo, the company that originally developed Cortado

References


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