Metadata-Version: 2.0
Name: django-massmedia
Version: 1.2.3
Summary: Allows for site staff can upload and edit the media files through the site, and the filesystem is maintained in the background.
Home-page: http://github.com/washingtontimes/django-massmedia
Author: Justin Quick
Author-email: jquick@washingtontimes.com
License: UNKNOWN
Platform: UNKNOWN
Requires-Dist: gdata
Requires-Dist: simplejson
Requires-Dist: django-mathfilters (==0.3.0)
Requires-Dist: IPTCInfo
Requires-Dist: hachoir-metadata
Requires-Dist: hachoir-core
Requires-Dist: hachoir-parser

================
Django-MassMedia
================

Read the documentation at http://readthedocs.org/docs/django-massmedia/en/latest/

New in 0.8
==========

* New settings format
	All settings are contained within ``MASSMEDIA_SETTINGS``\ , ``MASSMEDIA_STORAGE``\ , and ``MASSMEDIA_UPLOAD_TO``\ . Old settings will work, but will raise a deprecation warning.

* New settings
	``MASSMEDIA_SETTINGS["USE_TAGGING"]`` and ``MASSMEDIA_SERVICES["YOUTUBE"]``

* Support for YouTube feeds as collections

Optional Requirements:
	django-tagging

Optional, but used for extracting Metadata:
	IPTCInfo
	hachoir-core
	hachoir-metadata
	hachoir-parser


To start using the app, place it in your INSTALLED_APPS. You may want to edit the settings.py file in the massmedia directory and adjust a few things. If you want to gather metadata, you should install the hachoir lib available at http://hachoir.org/. All in all, you will need the hachoir core,parser, and metadata packages installed.

To customize the app, try editing some of the templates. Media items are templated with the show_media tag using templates based on the media's mimetype.


