Find answers to frequently asked questions about Media Cart issues, SPS/Media Portal export, and SPS desktop downloads.
What options are there to export in bulk?
Are there any differences between files exported using "Export Original" and the original file?
Why does the error "Exceeded maximum zip file size of 1 GB" appear in the job logs when I try to export a number of files?
What is the maximum zip file size for the Media Portal export?
You can't add additional files once a 1-GB threshold has been reached, or you've selected 500 files.
The export maximum size and number restrictions do apply to master images in addition to derived images. For more information, see
http://help.adobe.com/en_US/scene7/using/WSb6fcde95647ddd92-4f4373d8126675981f2-7fff.html
Media Portal user can't download an original asset, or a Media Portal user can't download a PDF as original. Why is that?
See the following Help article, which describes the export options in SPS. Once "Export Original" is enabled, your users can export the original files.
http://help.adobe.com/en_US/scene7/using/WSb6fcde95647ddd92-4f4373d8126675981f2-7fff.html
When an asset is loaded into Scene7 and then renamed in Scene7, what is the filename when the image is downloaded?
Why am I still getting deselected Preset options during export?
Why can't I select the option “Size = other” while exporting images?
To resolve this issue, have a company administrator of the account select the “Enable User-Defined Conversion” option. Choose Setup > Image Presets to access this option.
If the Enable User-Defined Conversion option is not available, make sure that the "Show MediaPortal Features" under Personal Setup is selected.
When do export links expire?
Where are the Media Cart items stored?
The media cart is stored in local Flash cache. SPS doesn’t set any limitation on the
maximum assets that you can add into media cart, but the Flash runtime controls it.
It’s possible that media cart will be cleaned automatically if there are many entries in that cache.
Find the following description from the official Flash runtime Help:
http://help.adobe.com/en_US/FlashPlatform/reference/actionscript/3/flash/net/SharedObject.html
"Local disk space considerations. Local shared objects have some limitations that are important to consider as you design your application.
Sometimes, SWF files aren't allowed to write local shared objects, and sometimes the data stored in local shared objects can be deleted without your knowledge. Flash Player users can manage the disk space that is available to individual domains or to all domains. When users decrease the amount of disk space available, some local shared objects can be deleted.
Flash Player users also have privacy controls that can prevent third-party domains (domains other than the domain in the current browser address bar) from reading or writing local shared objects. On Mac OS, starting with AIR 3.3, the location for local shared objects changed, so if you upgrade to the 3.3 namespace, it can appear as if the objects were lost.”