Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Parole is a modern simple media player based on the GStreamer framework.

Parole is a modern simple media player based on the GStreamer framework and written to fit well in the Xfce desktop. Parole is designed with simplicity, speed and resource usage in mind.

Everything is moving online these days, it seems, and entertainment is no different. With YouTube, Hulu, Netflix and plenty of other sites and services to choose from, it might seem that the days of actually owning a movie are gone.

But we're not quite there yet, there's still a place for DVDs and you're going to want to keep your home videos on your computer, even if you may also upload them to YouTube. And if you do that, you're going to need a video player.

If you're a Linux user, things used to be murky. We've all had files encoded in some esoteric format and seen video players coming with lists of tens of dependencies. Fortunately, things have evolved in the past few years and multimedia support on Linux has reached a more mature state. There are plenty of movie or media players to choose from on Linux, each with their own advantages and goals, but, for this review, I've gone outside the beaten track and tested Parole Media Player, a lightweight and somewhat spartan video player designed for the XFCE desktop environment.

Installing Parole Media Player.

Given that Parole is specifically targeted at XFCE, I've used the latest Xubuntu 10.04 Beta 2 as the underlying operating system. It really shouldn't make any difference what distro you're using, as long as you have XFCE and GStreamer you should be set. There is a recent stable build, Parole 0.2.0.2, but getting it up and running on your system may be a bit tricky.

The player isn't available in Ubuntu's default repositories and there aren't any handy .deb packages (or anything else, for that matter) available from any official source, so you're left with two options. Either roll up your sleeves and compile the thing from scratch, or get it from an unofficial PPA, which, luck would have it, happens to exist.

If you decide to go with the first option, you’re now faced with another choice, getting the latest builds from the Git repository or playing it safe and getting the source code for the latest stable build. You can grab the source code for the latest stable build, Parole 0.2.0.2, right here on Softpedia from the download link above. Unzip the archive and start baking with the typical set of commands.

CODE
./configure
make
make install (as root)


If you're feeling more adventurous, you can check out the latest Git source code and compile it. Grab the code:

CODE
git clone http://git.xfce.org/git/apps/parole


And then run:

CODE
./autogen.sh --prefix=/usr
make
make install (as root)

Finally, if you want to save yourself the hassle, you can get the Launchpad build of Parole 0.2.0.2 for Ubuntu/Xubuntu 9.10 Karmic Koala and 10.04 Lucid Lynx here.

The looks and feel.

Now that you've gotten everything working, let's find out if it was worth the trouble. Parole Media Player aims to be a general-purpose player, in a way, XFCE's answer to GNOME's Totem Movie Player. In fact, the similarities are striking, Parole replicates most of Totem's features, but with an XFCE flavor. The layout is split into three main areas, the actual video overlay, a playback toolbar at the bottom and a sidebar/playlist. Everything is built using the native GTK framework, so there's no flashy graphics and animations like those you'd get in a bunch of other media players, thus a welcomed relief.

Parole tries to keep things simple, which is probably its biggest advantage, but maybe its biggest drawback as well. It has everything you need to play a video or an audio file and nothing else. You get the usual playback control buttons and a volume slider in the bottom toolbar and you can add and arrange files in the playlist on the right. And that's pretty much it.

Media-file support and playback.

One thing that you don't have to worry about with Parole is media-format support. Because it's built on top of the very capable GStreamer multimedia framework, Parole should be able to handle any media file you can throw at it, including DVDs. It can also play live streams from your local network or anywhere online.

Video. If all you want is to load a movie and start enjoying it, then Parole is for you. You get all the expected controls and settings for playback, there's nothing spectacular in this part, but there really doesn't need to be. You can also adjust the image settings, all the basic stuff is there, brightness, contrast, hue and saturation, until you get things just the way you like them. As far as video is concerned, Parole gets the job done, but doesn't provide anything above the strict necessities.

Audio. Parole can also double as an audio player, but again, don't expect anything too fancy. You can create a playlist, arrange the tracks in the order you want and hit 'play,' and you also get 'shuffle' and 'repeat' options. There's not much else to say other than the fact that it works.

Conclusion.

Parole Media Player is definitely not aimed at even the moderate movie enthusiast. If you want to turn your machine into a multimedia powerhouse, Parole is not for you. But, if your desktop environment of choice is XFCE and all you want is to play a video or watch a movie once in a while or listen to the occasional MP3, then look no further. Parole is a simple tool with a simple goal and, in that, there's nothing you can fault it for. It does what it was intended to, namely play media files, well and nothing more. However, Parole is still in early development, so new features should be coming as things progress.

Screenshots.


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Friday, February 24, 2012

50 best examples of select your language pages.

50_best_examples_of_select_your_language_pages

Select Your Language Page is that single page you see when you arrived for the first time on a website like cocacola.com or nintendo.com, a pre-home page, with a list of options: language, country, region, etc, normally related to a big brand or name with presence all over the world or some many others sites with the idea of being seen in any country, like mini-sites or promotional sites even personal portfolios.

There are many sites who redirect you automatically to a language by your physical location, and this could be easy in normal cases but in some cases this not the best option. Let’s say you are from South America but you are in a pleasure travel by China and you don’t know a single word of Chinese, but for any reason you want to go to whateveryouwanttoputhere.com and… Taraaa, is in Chinese.

The reason, if they track your location they can know where you are and intermediately redirect you to the Chinese version of the site… three seconds later you just quit the site because you don’t like the Chinese version. But if they have givento you a Select Your Language Page, you would have made just one more click and you’d be stay much longer on that site. That’s what we all want on our site keep our visitors.

I know this kind of options are normally related to flash sites and I know the design community is not a big fan of this sites, for problems like SEO, keywords, google rank, etc.. I personally love this kind of sites, because they are impressive and interactive, and normally it means: beautiful sites with big loading times for most of them. But their objective is totally different than a blog, or forum. And designers have worked on, to create this pages like any other page on the site even if is not the most visited, so they deserve to be shown and appreciated.

Just after I finished my post about Best Coming Soon Pages, I have the idea for this post and after some time digging deep on the net and after a big list with more than 200 I finally choose the 50 Best Select Your Language Pages that could inspired you. Must of people don’t really give them to much attention; so they hopefully give you some ideas for your next project or for your personal site, if you are thinking on making in different languages.

There are not ordered by preference, only by themes.

So let’s see this collection of 50 Best Select  Your Language Pages.

1. Cirque du Soleil

cirque_du_soleil

2. Nintendo

nintendo

3. Coca Cola

cocacola

4. Pepsi World

pepesi_world

5. Oakley

oakley

6. Disney

disney

7. Elg

elg

8. Smirnoff

smirnoff

9. Havana Mojito

mojito

10. Absolut

absolut_vodka

11. Coors Light

coors_light

12. 26000 Vodka

26000_vodka

13. Ferrari

ferrari

14. Lamborghini

lamborghini

15. Audi R8

audir8

16. Bentley

bentley

17. Hummer

hummer

18. Mini Worldwide

mini

19. Dsinside Citroen

citroen_inside

20. Kamaz

kamaz

21. Prototype Experience

prototype_experience

22. Smamot

smamot

23. Xperiment

xperiment

24. Mcq Momies

mcq_momies

25. Bank of Imagination

camper

26. Nike

nike

27. Nike Troupe Battle

nike_id

28. Nike Store

nike_store

29. Nike ID

nikeid

30. Wee-Mee

weemee

31. Reserved

reserved

32. Greenpeace Weather

greenpeace_weather

33. Disney Tower of Terror

hollywood_tower_hotel

34. Digitalic

digitalic

35. Sukiland

sukiland

36. Grzegorz Kapias

grzegorzkapias

37. Generation Movie Project

generation_movie_project

38. Hf3 Coca Cola

hf3_cocacola

39. Halo 3

halo3

40. Forza Motor Sport

experience_forzamotorsport

41. Resident Evil 5

resident_evil

42. PES League

pes_league

43. Fifa Ea Sports

fifa10

44. Fifa Street 3

fifa_street3

45. Fifa 09

fifa09

46. Riddick

ridick

47. The Sims

the_sims

48. Spore

spore

49. Touch Generations DS

touch_generations_ds

50. Simcity DS

simcity_de

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