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  • HTML5 audio and video support

    13 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP uses HTML5 video and audio tags to play multimedia files, taking advantage of the latest W3C innovations supported by modern browsers.
    The MediaSPIP player used has been created specifically for MediaSPIP and can be easily adapted to fit in with a specific theme.
    For older browsers the Flowplayer flash fallback is used.
    MediaSPIP allows for media playback on major mobile platforms with the above (...)

  • Support audio et vidéo HTML5

    10 avril 2011

    MediaSPIP utilise les balises HTML5 video et audio pour la lecture de documents multimedia en profitant des dernières innovations du W3C supportées par les navigateurs modernes.
    Pour les navigateurs plus anciens, le lecteur flash Flowplayer est utilisé.
    Le lecteur HTML5 utilisé a été spécifiquement créé pour MediaSPIP : il est complètement modifiable graphiquement pour correspondre à un thème choisi.
    Ces technologies permettent de distribuer vidéo et son à la fois sur des ordinateurs conventionnels (...)

  • 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 (8236)

  • lavc/flacdsp : R-V V LPC16 function

    15 novembre 2023, par Rémi Denis-Courmont
    lavc/flacdsp : R-V V LPC16 function
    

    In this case, the inner loop computing the scalar product can be reduced
    to just one multiplication and one sum even with 128-bit vectors. The
    result is a lot simpler, but also brings more modest performance gains :

    flac_lpc_16_13_c : 15241.0
    flac_lpc_16_13_rvv_i32 : 11230.0
    flac_lpc_16_16_c : 17884.0
    flac_lpc_16_16_rvv_i32 : 12125.7
    flac_lpc_16_29_c : 27847.7
    flac_lpc_16_29_rvv_i32 : 10494.0
    flac_lpc_16_32_c : 30051.5
    flac_lpc_16_32_rvv_i32 : 10355.0

    • [DH] libavcodec/riscv/flacdsp_init.c
    • [DH] libavcodec/riscv/flacdsp_rvv.S
  • FFMPEG using wrong arguements when refering to image files

    14 août 2013, par Chad Marmon

    I am creating a bat file that will use FFMPEG to convert Real Media files to .MP4 files. I am looping though the current folder and finding files with the .rm extension adding several pictures to the video files to create a slide show effect in the final product.

    With this code here it works except it only shows one static image :

    for %%a in ("*.rm") do ffmpeg -f image2 -r 1/5 -i "img00.jpg" -i "%%a" -c:v libx264 -r 30 -preset slow -crf 20 -c:a libvo_aacenc -b:a 48k -b:v 16k "newfiles\%%~na.mp4"

    With this code it should show a series of photos. However it does not :

    for %%a in ("*.rm") do ffmpeg -f image2 -r 1/5 -i "img%02d.jpg" -i "%%a" -c:v libx264 -r 30 -preset slow -crf 20 -c:a libvo_aacenc -b:a 48k -b:v 16k "newfiles\%%~na.mp4"

    I get this error when I run the second piece of code :

    Could find no file with with path 'imgC :\Data\RealtoMP\FFMPEG_JPG\ffmpegA48V16_AudOnly' and index in the range 0-4
    imgC :\Data\RealtoMP\FFMPEG_JPG\ffmpegA48V16_AudOnly : No such file or directory

    It appears to me that it is somehow instead of getting the range argument like it should, it's injecting the path to the file that I am running. Any ideas of what is causing this ?

    EDIT :

    I fixed my problem by escaping the %02 with another %. The result is %%02 for it to act correctly in the script.

  • arm : vp9 : Add NEON optimizations of VP9 MC functions

    3 novembre 2016, par Martin Storsjö
    arm : vp9 : Add NEON optimizations of VP9 MC functions
    

    This work is sponsored by, and copyright, Google.

    The filter coefficients are signed values, where the product of the
    multiplication with one individual filter coefficient doesn’t
    overflow a 16 bit signed value (the largest filter coefficient is
    127). But when the products are accumulated, the resulting sum can
    overflow the 16 bit signed range. Instead of accumulating in 32 bit,
    we accumulate the largest product (either index 3 or 4) last with a
    saturated addition.

    (The VP8 MC asm does something similar, but slightly simpler, by
    accumulating each half of the filter separately. In the VP9 MC
    filters, each half of the filter can also overflow though, so the
    largest component has to be handled individually.)

    Examples of relative speedup compared to the C version, from checkasm :
    Cortex A7 A8 A9 A53
    vp9_avg4_neon : 1.71 1.15 1.42 1.49
    vp9_avg8_neon : 2.51 3.63 3.14 2.58
    vp9_avg16_neon : 2.95 6.76 3.01 2.84
    vp9_avg32_neon : 3.29 6.64 2.85 3.00
    vp9_avg64_neon : 3.47 6.67 3.14 2.80
    vp9_avg_8tap_smooth_4h_neon : 3.22 4.73 2.76 4.67
    vp9_avg_8tap_smooth_4hv_neon : 3.67 4.76 3.28 4.71
    vp9_avg_8tap_smooth_4v_neon : 5.52 7.60 4.60 6.31
    vp9_avg_8tap_smooth_8h_neon : 6.22 9.04 5.12 9.32
    vp9_avg_8tap_smooth_8hv_neon : 6.38 8.21 5.72 8.17
    vp9_avg_8tap_smooth_8v_neon : 9.22 12.66 8.15 11.10
    vp9_avg_8tap_smooth_64h_neon : 7.02 10.23 5.54 11.58
    vp9_avg_8tap_smooth_64hv_neon : 6.76 9.46 5.93 9.40
    vp9_avg_8tap_smooth_64v_neon : 10.76 14.13 9.46 13.37
    vp9_put4_neon : 1.11 1.47 1.00 1.21
    vp9_put8_neon : 1.23 2.17 1.94 1.48
    vp9_put16_neon : 1.63 4.02 1.73 1.97
    vp9_put32_neon : 1.56 4.92 2.00 1.96
    vp9_put64_neon : 2.10 5.28 2.03 2.35
    vp9_put_8tap_smooth_4h_neon : 3.11 4.35 2.63 4.35
    vp9_put_8tap_smooth_4hv_neon : 3.67 4.69 3.25 4.71
    vp9_put_8tap_smooth_4v_neon : 5.45 7.27 4.49 6.52
    vp9_put_8tap_smooth_8h_neon : 5.97 8.18 4.81 8.56
    vp9_put_8tap_smooth_8hv_neon : 6.39 7.90 5.64 8.15
    vp9_put_8tap_smooth_8v_neon : 9.03 11.84 8.07 11.51
    vp9_put_8tap_smooth_64h_neon : 6.78 9.48 4.88 10.89
    vp9_put_8tap_smooth_64hv_neon : 6.99 8.87 5.94 9.56
    vp9_put_8tap_smooth_64v_neon : 10.69 13.30 9.43 14.34

    For the larger 8tap filters, the speedup vs C code is around 5-14x.

    This is significantly faster than libvpx’s implementation of the same
    functions, at least when comparing the put_8tap_smooth_64 functions
    (compared to vpx_convolve8_horiz_neon and vpx_convolve8_vert_neon from
    libvpx).

    Absolute runtimes from checkasm :
    Cortex A7 A8 A9 A53
    vp9_put_8tap_smooth_64h_neon : 20150.3 14489.4 19733.6 10863.7
    libvpx vpx_convolve8_horiz_neon : 52623.3 19736.4 21907.7 25027.7

    vp9_put_8tap_smooth_64v_neon : 14455.0 12303.9 13746.4 9628.9
    libvpx vpx_convolve8_vert_neon : 42090.0 17706.2 17659.9 16941.2

    Thus, on the A9, the horizontal filter is only marginally faster than
    libvpx, while our version is significantly faster on the other cores,
    and the vertical filter is significantly faster on all cores. The
    difference is especially large on the A7.

    The libvpx implementation does the accumulation in 32 bit, which
    probably explains most of the differences.

    Signed-off-by : Martin Storsjö <martin@martin.st>

    • [DBH] libavcodec/arm/Makefile
    • [DBH] libavcodec/arm/vp9dsp_init_arm.c
    • [DBH] libavcodec/arm/vp9mc_neon.S
    • [DBH] libavcodec/vp9.h
    • [DBH] libavcodec/vp9block.c
    • [DBH] libavcodec/vp9dsp.c