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Plumi

Plumi
Screenshot of Plumi Demo Site.jpg
Screenshot of Plumi Demo Site
Developer(s) EngageMedia/Unweb
Stable release
4.5 / January 31, 2013 (2013-01-31)
Development status Active
Written in Python
Operating system Linux/Unix/Mac OS X
License GNU GPL/ZPL
Website http://www.plumi.org/

Plumi is a free software video sharing content management system based on Plone and primarily developed by the Asia-Pacific based EngageMedia, the Greece based Unweb.me consultancy, and others. Plumi allows users to create a video sharing site by adding it to an existing Plone instance. The software includes a wide array of functionality to facilitate video distribution and community creation.

Plumi is one project that aims to help establish "community controlled, noncommercial, free and open source alternatives" to commercial video sites such as YouTube. It is designed to allow communities and "citizen publishers create their own video-sharing communities out of the box" It is also designed to be more accessible to non-profit groups and independent journalists, given it is available as free-software without cost.

Plumi was first developed for Plone 2 by EngageMedia, with the first stable version released in September 2007, produced by EngageMedia and developed primarily by Andy Nicholson of Infinite Recursion and Dave Fregon of NetAxxs.

The second major release occurred on February 8, 2008. By this time several organisations and projects had installed Plumi to create their own video-sharing websites, including the World Social Forum TV, Bonn University Africa on TV and CabTube.

Version 3.0 of Plumi is based on Plone 3 and was deployed on May 19, 2010. The latest production version is 3.1.2 that was released at the end of November, 2010.

Development on migration to Plone 4 began in October 2010, with a 4.0b1 beta released in late November and a release candidate for 4.0 released in early December.

A final stable release of Plumi 4.0 for Plone 4.0 was released on January 17, 2011. This version includes bug fixes and improvements to ensure a stable release primarily focused on rebasing Plumi on Plone 4, in addition to other improvements and re-factoring of Plumi including new production and development buildouts located inside the plumi.app egg, updating the caching system, cleanup of installation code and moving parts to GenericSetup, replacing older products with newer and better maintained products or removing dependencies and other improvements. FFmpeg and codecs required by the transcoding framework are also now included in the buildout which means a simpler installation process.

A beta of Plumi 4.3 was released on December 4, 2011. The beta includes updating to Plone 4.1.2, support for 16:9 video transcoding, WebM transcoding, replacement of Flowplayer with mediaelement.js HTML5 player, video language added to metadata and support for the Amara (formerly Universal Subtitles) platform. A final version of 4.3 was released in January 2012.


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