After completing a rigorous quality process, my work’s been deemed worthy of sale on Alamy, a big UK stock agency. You can search or see a collection of my photos for sale.
After completing a rigorous quality process, my work’s been deemed worthy of sale on Alamy, a big UK stock agency. You can search or see a collection of my photos for sale.
More upload nonsense! Now we can upload large files, and all is well until a user turns up trying to upload a 173MB video file off a DVD-R. It keeps failing and I assume it’s the DVD but it copies to my machine OK, but fails to upload to the document library.
BACKUP LOG wss_content_go_snap_undp_org WITH TRUNCATE_ONLY go DBCC SHRINKFILE (2,1, TRUNCATEONLY) GO
Sometimes our users want to upload video to document libraries, which is understandable as there’s no fileshare for them to use. The trouble has been in the past that the upload limit is set to 50MB. This being the 21st century I thought I’d make life a little more rational and change it to 200MB or so. So! Into Central Admin, find the max upload and we’re away.
Except, of course, we’re not because it didn’t work.
Consulting the Google oracle I found this:
http://www.sharepointboris.net/2009/02/upload-bug-in-moss-2007-windows-server-2008/
Which lead me to:
http://support.microsoft.com/kb/925083
Now, with all the changes made to web.config, and I’m still getting an error saying the file is larger than allowed. Uh oh. Back to Central Admin, back to the setting, which is under Application Management->Web Application General Settings. Turns out I had the wrong web application selected.
Oh well. Stupid errors caused by stupid oversights again.
My mother gave me a video camera for Christmas, with a heavy hint that I should be taping my kids and sending her the results, as we live on different continents.
My mother gave me a video camera for Christmas, with a heavy hint that I should be taping my kids and sending her the results, as we live on different continents.
I haven’t done much so far because, while I feel I’m a better cameraman than most, editing takes a very long time and is quite tedious, even though I’m using the very basic Windows Live Moviemaker. You also have to get intimately familiar with your footage, so every camera shake or duff pan gets viewed a zillion times.
Anyway, the result is below. You’ll probably find it quite dull unless you’re in it or just find children adorable.