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Médias (1)
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Bug de détection d’ogg
22 mars 2013, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : français
Type : Video
Autres articles (43)
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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 (...) -
Support de tous types de médias
10 avril 2011Contrairement à beaucoup de logiciels et autres plate-formes modernes de partage de documents, MediaSPIP a l’ambition de gérer un maximum de formats de documents différents qu’ils soient de type : images (png, gif, jpg, bmp et autres...) ; audio (MP3, Ogg, Wav et autres...) ; vidéo (Avi, MP4, Ogv, mpg, mov, wmv et autres...) ; contenu textuel, code ou autres (open office, microsoft office (tableur, présentation), web (html, css), LaTeX, Google Earth) (...)
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MediaSPIP Player : problèmes potentiels
22 février 2011, parLe lecteur ne fonctionne pas sur Internet Explorer
Sur Internet Explorer (8 et 7 au moins), le plugin utilise le lecteur Flash flowplayer pour lire vidéos et son. Si le lecteur ne semble pas fonctionner, cela peut venir de la configuration du mod_deflate d’Apache.
Si dans la configuration de ce module Apache vous avez une ligne qui ressemble à la suivante, essayez de la supprimer ou de la commenter pour voir si le lecteur fonctionne correctement : /** * GeSHi (C) 2004 - 2007 Nigel McNie, (...)
Sur d’autres sites (11862)
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Museum of Multimedia Software, Part 2
16 août 2010, par Multimedia Mike — Software MuseumThis installment includes a bunch of old, discontinued Adobe software as well as some Flash-related mutlimedia software.
Screen Time for Flash Screen Saver Factory
"Create High Impact Screen Savers Using Macromedia Flash."
Requirements include Windows 3.1, 95 or NT 3.5.1. A 486 computer is required to play the resulting screensavers which are Flash projectors using Macromedia Flash 3.0.
Monster Interactive Instant GUI 2
Create eye-popping GUIs more easily for use in Flash. Usability experts would argue that this is not a good thing.
Adobe Dimensions 3.0
"The Easy Yet Powerful 3D Rendering Tool." This software was end-of-life’d in late 2004-early 2005 (depending on region).
Adobe ImageStyler
"Instantly add style to your Web site." Wikipedia claims that this product was sold from 1998 to 2000 when it was superseded by Adobe LiveMotion (see below).
Google is able to excavate a link to the Latin American site for Adobe ImageStyler, a page that doesn’t seem to be replicated in any other language.
Adobe LiveMotion
"Professional Web graphics and animation." This is version 1, where the last version was #2, released in 2002.
Adobe Streamline 4.0
"The most powerful way to convert images into line art." This was discontinued in mid-2005.
Adobe SuperATM
"The magic that maintains the look of your documents." This is the oldest item in my collection. A close examination of the back of the box reveals an old Adobe logo. The latest copyright date on the box is 1992.
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Official RealVideo Specifications
29 juillet 2010, par Multimedia Mike — GeneralA little birdie tipped me off to a publicly-accessible URL on the Helix community site (does anyone actually use Helix ?) that contains a bunch of specifications for RealVideo 8 and 9. I have been sifting through the documents to see exactly what they contain as the different files seem to be higher revisions of the same documents. Here is the title, date, and version of each PDF document :
- RNDecoderPerformanceARM.pdf : Decoder Performance on StrongARM and XScale ; May 12, 2003 ; Version 1.1
- rv89_decoder_summary.pdf : RealVideo 8/9 Combo Decoder Summary ; October 23, 2002 ; Version 1.0
- rv9_dec_external_spec_v14.pdf : RealVideo 9 External Specification ; November 7, 2003 ; Version 1.4
- rv8_dec_external_spec_v20.pdf : RealVideo 8 External Specification ; September 19, 2002 ; Version 2.0
- RV8DecoderExternalSpecificationv201.pdf : RealVideo 8 External Specification ; October 20, 2006 ; Version 2.01
- RV8DecoderExternalSpecificationv202.pdf : RealVideo 8 External Specification ; April 23, 2007 ; Version 2.02
- RV8DecoderExternalSpecificationv203.pdf : RealVideo 8 External Specification ; July 20, 2007 ; Version 2.03
- RV8DecoderExternalSpecificationv21.pdf : RealVideo 8 External Specification ; September 11, 2007 ; Version 2.1
- RV9DecoderExternalSpecificationv15.pdf ; RealVideo 9 External Specification ; January 26, 2002 ; Version 1.5
- RV9DecoderExternalSpecificationv16.pdf ; RealVideo 9 External Specification ; August 17, 2005 ; Version 1.6
- RV9DecoderExternalSpecificationv18.pdf ; RealVideo 9 External Specification ; September 11, 2007 ; Version 1.8
Additionally, there is an Excel spreadsheet entitled realvideo-faq.xls that appears to contain some general tech support advice for using Real’s official code. There are also 3 ZIP archives which contain profiling information about the official source code (post processing and entropy decoding top the charts which is no big surprise).
I guess the latest version of each document (the ones dated September 11, 2007) are worth mirroring. Unfortunately, those latest document versions use a terrible font.
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Linux Media Player Survey Circa 2001
2 septembre 2010, par Multimedia Mike — GeneralHere’s a document I scavenged from my archives. It was dated September 1, 2001 and I now publish it 9 years later. It serves as sort of a time capsule for the state of media player programs at the time. Looking back on this list, I can’t understand why I couldn’t find MPlayer while I was conducting this survey, especially since MPlayer is the project I eventually started to work for a few months after writing this piece.
For a little context, I had been studying multimedia concepts and tech for a year and was itching to get my hands dirty with practical multimedia coding. But I wanted to tackle what I perceived as unsolved problems– like playback of proprietary codecs. I didn’t want to have to build a new media playback framework just to start working on my problems. So I surveyed the players available to see which ones I could plug into and use as a testbed for implementing new decoders.
Regarding Real Player, I wrote : “We’re trying to move away from the proprietary, closed-source “solutions”. Heh. Was I really an insufferable open source idealist back in the day ?
Anyway, here’s the text with some Where are they now ? commentary [in brackets] :
Towards an All-Inclusive Media Playing Solution for Linux
I don’t feel that the media playing solutions for Linux set their sights high enough, even though they do tend to be quite ambitious.
I want to create a media player for Linux that can open a file, figure out what type of file it is (AVI, MOV, etc.), determine the compression algorithms used to encode the audio and video chunks inside (MPEG, Cinepak, Sorenson, etc.) and replay the file using the best audio, video, and CPU facilities available on the computer.
Video and audio playback is a solved problem on Linux ; I don’t wish to solve that problem again. The problem that isn’t solved is reliance on proprietary multimedia solutions through some kind of WINE-like layer in order to decode compressed multimedia files.
Survey of Linux solutions for decoding proprietary multimedia
updated 2001-09-01AVI Player for XMMS
This is based on Avifile. All the same advantages and limitations apply.
[Top Google hit is a Freshmeat page that doesn’t indicate activity since 2001-2002.]Avifile
This player does a great job at taking apart AVI and ASF files and then feeding the compressed chunks of multimedia data through to the binary Win32 decoders.The program is written in C++ and I’m not very good at interpreting that kind of code. But I’m learning all over again. Examining the object hierarchy, it appears that the designers had the foresight to include native support for decoders that are compiled into the program from source code. However, closer examination reveals that there is support for ONE source decoder and that’s the “decoder” for uncompressed data. Still, I tried to manipulate this routine to accept and decode data from other codecs but no dice. It’s really confounding. The program always crashes when I feed non-uncompressed data through the source decoder.
[Lives at http://avifile.sourceforge.net/ ; not updated since 2006.]Real Player
There’s not much to do with this since it is closed source and proprietary. Even though there is a plugin architecture, that’s not satisfactory. We’re trying to move away from the proprietary, closed-source “solutions”.
[Still kickin’ with version 11.]XAnim
This is a well-established Unix media player. To his credit, the author does as well as he can with the resources he has. In other words, he supports the non-proprietary video codecs well, and even has support for some proprietary video codecs through binary-only decoders.The source code is extremely difficult to work with as the author chose to use the X coding format which I’ve never seen used anywhere else except for X header files. The infrastructure for extending the program and supporting other codecs and file formats is there, I suppose, but I would have to wrap my head around the coding style. Maybe I can learn to work past that. The other thing that bothers me about this program is the decoding approach : It seems that each video decoder includes routines to decompress the multimedia data into every conceivable RGB and YUV output format. This seems backwards to me ; it seems better to have one decoder function that decodes the data into its native format it was compressed from (e.g., YV12 for MPEG data) and then pass that data to another layer of the program that’s in charge of presenting the data and possibly converting it if necessary. This layer would encompass highly-optimized software conversion routines including special CPU-specific instructions (e.g., MMX and SSE) and eliminate the need to place those routines in lots of other routines. But I’m getting ahead of myself.
[This one was pretty much dead before I made this survey, the most recent update being in 1999. Still, we owe it much respect as the granddaddy of Unix multimedia playback programs.]Xine
This seems like a promising program. It was originally designed to play MPEGs from DVDs. It can also play MPEG files on a hard drive and utilizes the Xv extensions for hardware YUV playback. It’s also supposed to play AVI files using the same technique as Avifile but I have never, ever gotten it to work. If an AVI file has both video and sound, the binary video decoder can’t decode any frames. If the AVI file has video and no sound, the program gets confused and crashes, as far as I can tell.Still, it’s promising, and I’ve been trying to work around these crashes. It doesn’t yet have the type of modularization I’d like to see. Right now, it tailored to suit MPEG playback and AVI playback is an afterthought. Still, it appears to have a generalized interface for dropping in new file demultiplexers.
I tried to extend the program for supporting source decoders by rewriting w32codec.c from scratch. I’m not having a smooth time of it so far. I’m able to perform some manipulations on the output window. However, I can’t get the program to deal with an RGB image format. It has trouble allocating an RGB surface with XvShmCreateImage(). This isn’t suprising, per my limited knowledge of X which is that Xv applies to YUV images, but it could also apply to RGB images as well. Anyway, the program should be able to fall back on regular RGB pixmaps if that Xv call fails.
Right now, this program is looking the most promising. It will take some work to extend the underlying infrastructure, but it seems doable since I know C quite well and can understand the flow of this program, as opposed to Avifile and its C++. The C code also compiles about 10 times faster.
[My home project for many years after a brief flirtation with MPlayer. It is still alive ; its latest release was just a month ago.]XMovie
This library is a Quicktime movie player. I haven’t looked at it too extensively yet, but I do remember looking at it at one point and reading the documentation that said it doesn’t support key frames. Still, I should examine it again since they released a new version recently.
[Heroine Virtual still puts out some software but XMovie has not been updated since 2005.]XMPS
This program compiles for me, but doesn’t do much else. It can play an MP3 file. I have been able to get MPEG movies to play through it, but it refuses to show the full video frame, constricting it to a small window (obviously a bug).
[This project is hosted on SourceForge and is listed with a registration date of 2003, well after this survey was made. So the project obviously lived elsewhere in 2001. Meanwhile, it doesn’t look like any files ever made it to SF for hosting.]XTheater
I can’t even get this program to compile. It’s supposed to be an MPEG player based on SMPEG. As such, it probably doesn’t hold much promise for being easily extended into a general media player.
[Last updated in 2002.]GMerlin
I can’t get this to compile yet. I have a bug report in to the dev group.
[Updated consistently in the last 9 years. Last update was in February of this year. I can’t find any record of my bug report, though.]