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Richard Stallman et le logiciel libre
19 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Mai 2013
Langue : français
Type : Texte
Autres articles (66)
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Participer à sa traduction
10 avril 2011Vous pouvez nous aider à améliorer les locutions utilisées dans le logiciel ou à traduire celui-ci dans n’importe qu’elle nouvelle langue permettant sa diffusion à de nouvelles communautés linguistiques.
Pour ce faire, on utilise l’interface de traduction de SPIP où l’ensemble des modules de langue de MediaSPIP sont à disposition. ll vous suffit de vous inscrire sur la liste de discussion des traducteurs pour demander plus d’informations.
Actuellement MediaSPIP n’est disponible qu’en français et (...) -
List of compatible distributions
26 avril 2011, parThe table below is the list of Linux distributions compatible with the automated installation script of MediaSPIP. Distribution nameVersion nameVersion number Debian Squeeze 6.x.x Debian Weezy 7.x.x Debian Jessie 8.x.x Ubuntu The Precise Pangolin 12.04 LTS Ubuntu The Trusty Tahr 14.04
If you want to help us improve this list, you can provide us access to a machine whose distribution is not mentioned above or send the necessary fixes to add (...) -
Sélection de projets utilisant MediaSPIP
29 avril 2011, parLes exemples cités ci-dessous sont des éléments représentatifs d’usages spécifiques de MediaSPIP pour certains projets.
Vous pensez avoir un site "remarquable" réalisé avec MediaSPIP ? Faites le nous savoir ici.
Ferme MediaSPIP @ Infini
L’Association Infini développe des activités d’accueil, de point d’accès internet, de formation, de conduite de projets innovants dans le domaine des Technologies de l’Information et de la Communication, et l’hébergement de sites. Elle joue en la matière un rôle unique (...)
Sur d’autres sites (10342)
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Raspberry Pi Camera Module - Stream to LAN
20 août 2015, par user3096434have a little problem with the setup of my RasPi camera infrastructure. Basically I have a RPi 2 which shall act as a MontionEye server from now on and 2 Pi B+ with camera modules.
Previously, when I had only one camera in my network, I used the following command to stream the output from RPi B+ camera module to Youtube in full HD. So far, this command works flawless :
raspivid -n -vf -hf -t 0 -w 1920 -h 1080 -fps 30 -b 3750000 -g 50 -o - | b ffmpeg -ar 8000 -ac 2 -acodec pcm_s16le -f s16le -ac 2 -i /dev/zero -f h264 -i - -vcodec copy -acodec aac -ab 64k -g 50 -strict experimental -f flv $RTMP_URL/$STREAM_KEY
Now I have a 2nd RPi with a camera module and figured it might be the time for a change towards motioneye, as I then can view both/all camera’s in my network within the same software. I have motioneye installed on my RPi 2 and the software is running correctly.
I have a little problem when it comes to access the data stream from the RPi B+ camera on my local network.
Basically I cannot seem to figure out how to change the ffmpeg portion of the above mentioned command, in a way so it will stream the data to localhost (Or the RPi2 IP where motioneye runs - which one to use ?) instead of Youtube or any other videohoster.
I wonder, if changing the following part is a correct assumption :
Instead of using variables to define Youtube URL and key
-f flv $RTMP_URL/$STREAM_KEY
And change this to
-f flv 10.1.1.11:8080
Will I then be able to add this RPi B+ video stream to my RPi 2 motioneye server, by using motioneye ’add network camera’ function ?
From my understanding I should be able to enter the following details into motioneye ’add network camera’wizard :
Camera type: network camera
RTSP-URL: 10.1.1.11:8080
User: Pi
Pass: [my pwd]
Camera: [my ffmpeg stream shall show here]Thanks in advance !
Uhm, and then... How do I forwarded the video stream from a given camera connected to motioneye ? Like from motioneye to youtube (or similar), without re-encoding the stream ?
Like the command shown above streams directly to youtube. But I want to have it in a way, that video is streamed to local network/motioneye server, and from there I can decide which camera’s stream and when I want to send the videostream to youtube ?
How would a RPi professional realize this ?
The command above explained : Takes full HD video with 30 fps from Pi camera module and hardware encodes it on GPU with 3.75mbit/s. Then I streamcopy the video (no re-encoding) and add some audio, so that the stream complies with youtube rules (yes, no live stream without audio). Audio is taken from virtual SB16 /dev/zero at low sampling rate then encoded to 32k AAC and sent to youtube. Works fine xD.
Just when I have like 3 or more of these RPi cams the youtube stream approach ain’t feasible anymore, as my DSL upstream is limited (10 mbit/s=. Thus I need motioneye server and some magic, so I can watch f.e. all 3 camera’s videostream and then motioneye server can select and streamcopy the video from the Pi’s cam I choose and send it to youtube, as the original command did.
Any help, tips, links to similar projects highly appreciated.
Again, many thanks in advance, and even more thanks just cause you read until here.
—mx
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FFmpeg command to transcode video in order to bypass YouTube Content ID
18 août 2015, par 阿尔曼This is the code I use to crop and add subtitles to the video :
ffmpeg -y -i VTS_01_1.VOB -filter_complex "[0:v] crop=720:432:0:72 [crop]; [crop] ass=VTS_01.ass" -c:v libx264 -c:a aac -strict -2 output.mp4
and this is the result I published on YouTube :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8vwUFO9uF-U
My problem : Some of the videos received Content ID claim and were blocked in 244 countries, for example :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IVt24GLmfVY
My question : Is it possible to transcode video a little bit with FFmpeg in order to bypass YouTube Content ID and how to do it ?
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Stream video content through Web API 2
12 février 2016, par FaNIXI’m in the process of working out what the best way is going to be to do the following :
I have a bunch of CCTV footage files (MP4 files, ranging from 4MB-50MB in size), which I want to make available through a web portal. My first thought was to stream the file through Web API, so I found the link below :
http://www.strathweb.com/2013/01/asynchronously-streaming-video-with-asp-net-web-api/
After implementing a sample project, I realised that the example was based on Web API 1, and not Web API 2.1, which is what I’m using. After doing some more research, I got the code to compile with WebAPI 2.1. I then realised that if I want to do streaming I cannot use MP4 files, there is a fair amount of technical detail behind this, so here is the thread :
Best approach to real time http streaming to HTML5 video client
It seems for this to work I need to encode my MP4 files to something like WebM, but that is going to take too much time. Icecast (http://icecast.org/), which is a streaming server, but I haven’t tried it out yet, again not sure if this is what I need to do.
Now that I think of it, I actually don’t need live streaming, I just need to allow the client to play the video file through their browser, perhaps using HTML5 video element ? The thing is, my application needs to work on IOS as well, so I reckon that means I cant even encode my MP4 to FLV and just use flash.
All I really need is to have all my video clips as thumbnails on a web page, and if the client clicks on one, it begins to play ASAP, without having to download the entire file. Think of the "Watch Trailer" feature on imdb.com. Simply just play a video file, thats really what I want. I don’t need LIVE streaming, which is what I think WebM is for ? Again, not sure.