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Autres articles (7)

  • Encoding and processing into web-friendly formats

    13 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP automatically converts uploaded files to internet-compatible formats.
    Video files are encoded in MP4, Ogv and WebM (supported by HTML5) and MP4 (supported by Flash).
    Audio files are encoded in MP3 and Ogg (supported by HTML5) and MP3 (supported by Flash).
    Where possible, text is analyzed in order to retrieve the data needed for search engine detection, and then exported as a series of image files.
    All uploaded files are stored online in their original format, so you can (...)

  • Amélioration de la version de base

    13 septembre 2013

    Jolie sélection multiple
    Le plugin Chosen permet d’améliorer l’ergonomie des champs de sélection multiple. Voir les deux images suivantes pour comparer.
    Il suffit pour cela d’activer le plugin Chosen (Configuration générale du site > Gestion des plugins), puis de configurer le plugin (Les squelettes > Chosen) en activant l’utilisation de Chosen dans le site public et en spécifiant les éléments de formulaires à améliorer, par exemple select[multiple] pour les listes à sélection multiple (...)

  • Supporting all media types

    13 avril 2011, par

    Unlike most software and media-sharing platforms, MediaSPIP aims to manage as many different media types as possible. The following are just a few examples from an ever-expanding list of supported formats : images : png, gif, jpg, bmp and more audio : MP3, Ogg, Wav and more video : AVI, MP4, OGV, mpg, mov, wmv and more text, code and other data : OpenOffice, Microsoft Office (Word, PowerPoint, Excel), web (html, CSS), LaTeX, Google Earth and (...)

Sur d’autres sites (2466)

  • Live website to video

    25 janvier 2016, par Asaf Nevo

    I have a website which shows a slideshow of pictures using JS.

    The pictures objects are coming from a web service and are being updated from time to time.

    In few days, I doing a test with a potential client to present the pictures slideshow on his big LED screen.

    He’s using BSPlayer for the content on screen, an able to present a website, but it will never be a clean full screen (the X button and such will always be presents).

    He’s the most comfort with presenting a video rather than a website.

    One of my ideas of solutions was to check if there is a way to stream a content of a website.

    Googling it got me to a solution combined ImageMagic and FFMPEG which you can read about here

    My problem is that this solution only creates a slide show out of static pictures - which I can do, but i’m losing the dynamic part of my live slideshow.

    Is there a tool for capturing websites and converting them into a stream of videos ?

    Or maybe a workaround to achieve the same functionality ?

  • Anomalie #3991 : Erreur compression CSS et base64

    10 avril 2018, par b b

    Après réflexion, désolé, je pense que ça ne couvre plus tous les cas, exemple background: url(../imgs/bouton-follow-gris.png) 0px center no-repeat ne sera plus matché par la regex :

  • G.I. Joe Custom Multimedia

    30 mars 2012, par Multimedia Mike — General

    I received this 3-disc set of G.I. Joe CD-ROMs today :



    Copyright 2003, and labeled as PC ONLY. Each disc claims to have 2 episodes. So are these some sort of video discs ? Any gaming elements ? I dove in to investigate.

    So, it turns out that there are some games on these discs, done in Flash Player (which tells me that these were probably available on the web at some point). Here’s a shooting gallery game from the first disc :



    As promised by the CD-ROM copy, the menu does grant access to 2 classic G.I. Joe episodes. Selecting either one launches this :



    Powered by C-ezy ? Am I interpreting that correctly ? Anyway, the video player goes fullscreen and looks fine (given the source material). I can’t capture screenshots and controls are limited to : space for pause, ESC to exit player, and up/down to control volume. No seeking and certainly no onscreen controls. Pretty awful player.

    Studying the first disc, I find a 550 MB file with the name 5859Hasbro.egm. Coupled with ep58.cfg and ep59.cfg files in the same directory, I gather that the disc has G.I. Joe episodes 58 and 59 (though the exact episodes, “There’s No Place Like Springfield” parts 1 and 2, are listed on Wikipedia as being episodes 154 and 155 ; but who’s counting ?). The cfg files contain this text :

    ep58.cfg :
    EGM_GIJOE.exe
    5859Hasbro.egm /noend /track:0 /singletrack
    

    ep59.cfg :
    EGM_GIJOE.exe
    5859Hasbro.egm /noend /track:1 /singletrack

    The big EGM file starts with the string “Egenie Player”. After that, I see absolutely no clues. The supporting EGM_GIJOE.exe file has some interesting strings : “Decore Bits Per Pixel” (I know I have seen “Decore” used to mean “decoding core” in some libraries), “Egenie Player – %s, Version :%s”, “4th June 2002″, a list of common FourCC tags seen in AVI files, “Brought to you by Martin, Patrick Bob and Bren” (do you suppose “Patrick Bob” is one person’s name ?), a list of command line options…

    Aha ! A URL : http:\www.e-genie.tv (yep, backslashes, not forward slashes). e-genie.tv seems to redirect to mygenie.tv, which… doesn’t appear to be strictly related to video technology these days.