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  • Emballe Médias : Mettre en ligne simplement des documents

    29 octobre 2010, par

    Le plugin emballe médias a été développé principalement pour la distribution mediaSPIP mais est également utilisé dans d’autres projets proches comme géodiversité par exemple. Plugins nécessaires et compatibles
    Pour fonctionner ce plugin nécessite que d’autres plugins soient installés : CFG Saisies SPIP Bonux Diogène swfupload jqueryui
    D’autres plugins peuvent être utilisés en complément afin d’améliorer ses capacités : Ancres douces Légendes photo_infos spipmotion (...)

  • Contribute to a better visual interface

    13 avril 2011

    MediaSPIP is based on a system of themes and templates. Templates define the placement of information on the page, and can be adapted to a wide range of uses. Themes define the overall graphic appearance of the site.
    Anyone can submit a new graphic theme or template and make it available to the MediaSPIP community.

  • Les formats acceptés

    28 janvier 2010, par

    Les commandes suivantes permettent d’avoir des informations sur les formats et codecs gérés par l’installation local de ffmpeg :
    ffmpeg -codecs ffmpeg -formats
    Les format videos acceptés en entrée
    Cette liste est non exhaustive, elle met en exergue les principaux formats utilisés : h264 : H.264 / AVC / MPEG-4 AVC / MPEG-4 part 10 m4v : raw MPEG-4 video format flv : Flash Video (FLV) / Sorenson Spark / Sorenson H.263 Theora wmv :
    Les formats vidéos de sortie possibles
    Dans un premier temps on (...)

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  • Web Analytics Reports : 10 Key Types and How to Use Them

    29 janvier 2024, par Erin

    You can’t optimise your website to drive better results if you don’t know how visitors are engaging with your site.

    But how do you correctly analyse data and identify patterns ? With the right platform, you can use a wide range of web analytics reports to dive deep into the data.

    In this article, we’ll discuss what website analytics reports are, different types, why you need them, and how to use reports to find the insights you need.

    What is web analytics ?

    Website analytics is the process of gathering, processing, and analysing data that shows what users are doing when they visit your website. 

    You typically achieve this with web analytics tools by adding a tracking code that shares data with the analytics platform when someone visits the site.

    Illustration of how website analytics works

    The visitors trigger the tracking code, which collects data on how they act while on your site and then sends that information to the analytics platform. You can then see the data in your analytics solution and create reports based on this data.

    While there are a lot of web analytics solutions available, this article will specifically demonstrate reports using Matomo.

    What are web analytics reports ?

    Web analytics reports are analyses that focus on specific data points within your analytics platform. 

    For example, this channel report in Matomo shows the top referring channels of a website.

    Channel types report in Matomo analytics

    Your marketing team can use this report to determine which channels drive the best results. In the example above, organic search drives almost double the visits and actions of social campaigns. 

    If you’re investing the same amount of money, you’d want to move more of your budget from social to search.

    Why you need to get familiar with specific web analytics reports

    The default web analytics dashboard offers an overview of high-level trends in performance. However, it usually does not give you specific insights that can help you optimise your marketing campaigns.

    For example, you can see that your conversions are down month over month. But, at a glance, you do not understand why that is.

    To understand why, you need to go granular and wider — looking into qualifying data that separates different types of visitors from each other.

    Gartner predicts that 70% of organisations will focus on “small and wide” data by 2025 over “big data.” Most companies lack the data volume to simply let big data and algorithms handle the optimising.

    What you can do instead is dive deep into each visitor. Figure out how they engage with your site, and then you can adjust your campaigns and page content accordingly.

    Common types of web analytics reports

    There are dozens of different web analytics reports, but they usually fall into four separate categories :

    Diagram that illustrates the main types of web analytics reports
    • Referral sources : These reports show where your visitors come from. They range from channel reports — search, social media — to specific campaigns and ads.
    • Engagement (on-site actions) : These reports dive into what visitors are doing on your site. They break down clicks, scrolling, completed conversion goals, and more.
    • E-commerce performance : These reports show the performance of your e-commerce store. They’ll help you dive into the sales of individual products, trends in cart abandonment and more.
    • Demographics : These reports help you understand more about your visitors — where they’re visiting from, their browser language, device, and more.

    You can even combine insights across all four using audience segmentation and custom reports. (We’ll cover this in more detail later.)

    How to use 10 important website analytics reports

    The first step is to install the website analytics code on your website. (We include more detailed information in our guide on how to track website visitors.)

    Then, you need to wait until you have a few days (or, if you have limited traffic, a few weeks) of data. Without sufficient website visitor data, none of the reports will be meaningful.

    Visitor Overview report

    First, let’s take a look at the Visitor Overview report. It’s a general report that breaks down the visits over a given time period.

    Visitor overview report in Matomo

    What this report shows :

    • Trends in unique visits month over month
    • Basic engagement trends like the average visit length and bounce rate
    • The number of actions taken per page

    In general, this report is more of a high-level indicator you can use to explore certain areas more thoroughly. For example, if most of your traffic comes from organic traffic or social media, you can dive deeper into those channels.

    Try Matomo for Free

    Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.

    No credit card required

    Location report

    Next up, we have the most basic type of demographic report — the Location report. It shows where your visitors tend to access your website from.

    Location report in Matomo

    What this report shows :

    • The country, state or city your visitors access your website from

    This report is most useful for identifying regional trends. You may notice that your site is growing in popularity in a country. You can take advantage of this by creating a regional campaign to double down on a high performing audience.

    Device report

    Next, we have the Device report, which breaks down your visitors’ devices.

    Device report in Matomo analytics

    What this report shows :

    • Overall device types used by your visitors
    • Specific device models used

    Today, most websites are responsive or use mobile-first design. So, just seeing that many people access your site through smartphones probably isn’t all that surprising.

    But you should ensure your responsive design doesn’t break down on popular devices. The design may not work effectively because many phones have different screen resolutions. 

    Users Flow report

    The Users Flow report dives deeper into visitor engagement — how your visitors act on your site. It shows common landing pages — the first page visitors land on — and how they usually navigate your site from there.

    Users flow report in Matomo analytics

    What this report shows :

    • Popular landing pages
    • How your visitors most commonly navigate your site

    You can use this report to determine which intermediary pages are crucial to keeping visitors engaged. For example, you can prioritise optimisation and rewriting for case study pages that don’t get a lot of direct search or campaign traffic.

    Improving this flow can improve conversion rates and the impact of your marketing efforts.

    Try Matomo for Free

    Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.

    No credit card required

    Exit Pages report

    The Exit Pages report complements the Users Flow report well. It highlights the most common pages visitors leave your website from.

    Exit pages report in Matomo analytics

    What this report shows :

    • The most common exit pages on your website
    • The exit rates of these pages

    Pages with high exit rates fall into two categories. The first are pages where it makes sense that visitors leave, like a post-purchase thank-you page. The second are pages where you’d want your visitors to stay and keep flowing down the funnel. When the rates are unusually high on product pages, category pages, or case study pages, you may have found a problem.

    By combining insights from the Users Flow and Exit Pages reports, you can find valuable candidates for optimisation. This is a key aspect of effective conversion rate optimisation.

    Traffic Acquisition Channel report

    The Acquisition Channels report highlights the channels that drive the most visitors to your site.

    Acquisition report in Matomo analytics

    What this report shows :

    • Top referring traffic sources by channel type
    • The average time on site, bounce rates, and actions taken by the source

    Because of increasingly privacy-sensitive browsers and apps, the best way to reliably track traffic sources is to use campaign tracking URL. Matomo offers an easy-to-use campaign tracking URL builder to simplify this process.

    Search Engines and Keywords report

    The Search Engines and Keywords report shows which keywords are driving the most organic search traffic and from what search engines.

    Search engine keyword report in Matomo analytics

    What this report shows :

    • Search engine keywords that drive traffic
    • The different search engines that refer visitors

    One of the best ways to use this report is to identify low-hanging fruit. You want to find keywords driving some traffic where your page isn’t ranked in the top three results. If the keyword has high traffic potential, you should then work to optimise that page to rank higher and get more traffic. This technique is an efficient way to improve your SEO performance.

    Ecommerce Products report

    If you sell products directly on your website, the Ecommerce Products report is a lifesaver. It shows you exactly how all your products are performing.

    Ecommerce product report in Matomo analytics

    What this report shows :

    • How your products are selling
    • The average sale price (with coupons) and quantity

    This report could help an online retailer identify top-selling items, adjust pricing based on average sale prices, and strategically allocate resources to promote or restock high-performing products for maximum profitability.

    Try Matomo for Free

    Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.

    No credit card required

    Ecommerce Log report

    If you want to explore every single ecommerce interaction, the Ecommerce Log report is for you. It breaks down the actions of visitors who add products to their cart in real time.

    Ecommerce log report in Matomo analytics

    What this report shows :

    • The full journey of completed purchases and abandoned carts
    • The exact actions your potential customers take and how long their journeys last

    If you suspect that the user experience of your online store isn’t perfect, this report helps you confirm or deny that suspicion. By closely examining individual interactions, you can identify common exit pages or other issues.

  • Conversion Funnel Optimisation : 10 Ways to Convert More

    24 janvier 2024, par Erin

    Converting leads into happy customers is the ultimate goal of any sales and marketing team. But there are many steps in between those two events, or in other words, funnel stages. 

    Your sales funnel includes all the steps you take to make your audience aware of your product or services and convince them to purchase. Conversion funnel optimisation strategies can help you move users through the stages of your sales funnel. 

    This article will show you how to optimise your conversion funnel and boost sales — no matter how your funnel looks. We’ll go over practical tips you can implement and how you can analyse and measure results.

    Let’s get started.

    What is conversion funnel optimisation ? 

    Conversion funnel optimisation is the strategic and ongoing process of refining and improving the different stages of a sales or marketing funnel to increase the rate at which users complete desired actions.

    A sales funnel represents the stages a potential customer goes through before purchasing. 

    The typical stages of a sales funnel include :

    • Awareness : At the top of the funnel, potential customers become aware of your product or service. 
    • Consideration : In this stage, prospects evaluate the product or service against alternatives. They may compare features, prices and customer reviews to make an informed decision.
    • Conversion : The prospect completes the transaction and becomes an actual customer by purchasing.
    • Loyalty : You can turn one-time buyers into repeat customers and brand advocates. 

    It’s called a “funnel” because, similar to the shape of a funnel, the number of potential customers decreases as they progress through the various stages of the sales process — as you can see illustrated below.

    Marketing funnel stages

    Sales funnels can vary across industries and business models, but the general concept remains the same. The goal is to guide potential customers through each funnel stage, addressing their needs and concerns at each step, ultimately leading to a successful conversion. 

    You can create and monitor a custom funnel for your site’s user journey with a web analytics solution like Matomo.

    Try Matomo for Free

    Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.

    No credit card required

    The importance of conversion funnel optimisation 

    At the heart of conversion funnel optimisation is the quest for higher conversion rates

    Refining the customer journey can increase the chances of turning visitors into customers who return repeatedly.

    Specifically, here’s how conversion funnel optimisation can benefit your business :

    • Increased conversions : Marketers can increase the likelihood of turning website visitors into customers by making the user journey more user-friendly and persuasive.
    • Higher revenue : Improved conversion rates aren’t just numbers on a chart ; they translate to tangible revenue. 
    • Increased ROI (return on investment) : By optimising the conversion funnel, you can get more value from your marketing and sales efforts. 
    • Improved customer satisfaction : When customers find it easy and enjoyable to interact with a website or service, it positively influences their satisfaction and likelihood of returning.
    • Data-driven decision-making : Businesses can make informed decisions on budgets and resources based on user behaviour and performance metrics by analysing and optimising conversion funnels.

    ​​Ultimately, conversion funnel optimisation efforts align the entire funnel with overarching business goals.

    10 ways to optimise your conversion funnel 

    Here are 10 ways to optimise your conversion funnel.

    1. Identify and segment your target audience

    The key to a successful conversion funnel begins with a deep understanding of your target audience. 

    Identifying and segmenting your audience lets you speak directly to their pain points, desires and motivations.

    One effective way to know your audience better is by creating detailed buyer personas. These are fictional representations of your ideal customers based on thorough market research and real data. Dive into demographics and behavioural patterns to craft personas that resonate with your audience.

    Audience segmentation

    Note that consumer preferences are not static. They evolve, influenced by trends, technological advancements and shifts in societal values. Staying attuned to these changes is crucial as part of optimising your conversion funnel.

    Thus, you must regularly update your buyer personas and adjust your marketing strategies accordingly.

    2. Create content for every stage of the funnel

    Each funnel stage represents a different mindset and needs for your potential customers. Tailoring your content ensures you deliver the right message at the right time to the right audience. 

    Here’s how to tailor your content to fit prospective customers at every conversion funnel stage.

    Awareness-stage content

    Prospects here are seeking information. Your content should be educational and focused on addressing their pain points. Create blog posts, infographics and videos introducing them to your industry, product or service.

    This video we created at Matomo is a prime example of awareness-stage content, grabbing attention and educating viewers about Matomo.

    Consideration-stage content

    Prospects are evaluating their options. Provide content highlighting your product’s unique selling points, such as case studies, product demonstrations and customer testimonials.

    Here’s how we use a versus landing page at Matomo to persuade prospects at this funnel stage.

    Versus page example from Matomo comparing Google Analytics alternative

    Conversion-stage content

    This is the final push. Ensure a smooth transition to conversion with content like promotional offers, limited-time discounts and clear calls to action (CTA).

    Loyalty-stage content

    In this stage, you might express gratitude for the purchase through personalised thank-you emails. Follow up with additional resources, tips or exclusive offers to reinforce a positive post-purchase experience. This also positions your brand as a helpful resource beyond the initial sale.

    Reward customer loyalty with exclusive offers, discounts or membership in a loyalty program.

    3. Capture leads

    Lead magnets are incentives offered to potential customers in exchange for their contact information, typically their email addresses. 

    Examples of lead magnets include :

    • Ebooks and whitepapers : In-depth resources that delve into specific topics of interest to your target audience.
    • Webinars and workshops : Live or recorded sessions that offer valuable insights, training or demonstrations.
    • Free trials and demos : Opportunities for potential customers to experience your product or service firsthand.
    • Checklists and templates : Practical tools that help your audience solve specific challenges.
    • Exclusive offers and discounts : Special promotions are available to those who subscribe or provide their contact information.

    For instance, here’s how HubSpot uses templates as lead magnets.

    HubSpot templates

    Similarly, you can incorporate your lead magnets into relevant articles or social media posts, email campaigns and other marketing channels.

    4. Optimise your landing pages

    Understanding how visitors interact with your landing pages is a game-changer. So, the first step in optimising your landing pages is to analyse them.

    Enter Matomo’s heatmaps — the secret weapon in landing page optimisation. They visually represent how users interact with your pages, revealing where they linger, what catches their attention and where they may encounter friction. 

    Matomo Heatmaps Feature

    Here are a few landing page elements you should pay attention to :

    • Strategic visual elements : Integrate high-quality images, videos and graphics that support your message and guide visitors through the content.
    • Compelling copy : Develop concise and persuasive copy that emphasises the benefits of your offering, addressing user pain points.
    • Effective CTA : Ensure your CTA is prominently displayed, using compelling language and colours that stand out.
    • Mobile responsiveness : Optimise your landing pages for various devices, especially considering the prevalence of mobile users.
    • Minimal form fields : Reduce friction by keeping form fields to a minimum, requesting only essential information.
    • ​​Leverage social proof : Integrate testimonials, reviews and trust badges to build trust and credibility.
    • A/B testing : Experiment with variations in design, copy and CTAs through A/B testing, allowing data to guide your decisions.

    Try Matomo for Free

    Get the web insights you need, without compromising data accuracy.

    No credit card required

    5. ​​Use compelling Calls to Action (CTAs)

    Crafting compelling CTAs is an art that involves a careful balance of persuasion, clarity and relevance.

    Here are a few tips you can implement to write CTAs that support your goals :

    • Use language that compels action. Instead of generic phrases like “Click Here,” opt for more persuasive alternatives such as “Unlock Exclusive Access” or “Start Your Free Trial.”
    • Make sure your CTAs are clear and straightforward. Visitors should instantly understand what action you want them to take. 
    • Tailor CTAs to the specific content on the page. Whether it’s a blog post, landing page or email, the CTA should seamlessly connect with the surrounding context.
    • Position your CTAs strategically. They should be prominently displayed and easily noticeable, guiding visitors without intruding.
    • Create a sense of urgency. Encourage immediate action by incorporating language that instils a sense of urgency. Phrases like “Limited Time Offer” or “Act Now” can prompt quicker responses.

    6. Have an active social presence

    Social media platforms are bustling hubs of activity where your target audience spends a significant portion of their online time. Cultivating a social media presence allows you to meet your audience where they are, fostering a direct line of communication.

    Moreover, the integration of shopping features directly into social media platforms transforms them into seamless shopping experiences. Nearly half of Instagram users shop weekly through the platform. 

    Also, the US social commerce sales continue to grow each year and are expected to reach $79.64 billion by 2025.

    Graph showing the UD social commerce sales 2019-2025

    7. Build a brand community

    Four in five customers consider communities important to how engaged they are with a brand.

    A strong community fosters a sense of belonging and loyalty among members. When customers feel connected to your brand and each other, they are more likely to remain loyal over the long term. 

    Also, satisfied community members often share their positive experiences with others, expanding your brand’s reach without additional marketing efforts.

    For example, Nike’s community for runners is a digital space where individuals share their running journeys, accomplishments and challenges. 

    Nike Run Club page

    By strategically building and nurturing a community, you not only enhance retention and spur referrals but also create a space where your brand becomes an integral part of your customers’ lives. 

    8. Conduct A/B tests

    A/B testing systematically compares two versions of a webpage, email or other content to determine which performs better.

    Examples of elements to A/B test :

    • CTAs : The language, colour, size and placement of CTAs can significantly impact user engagement. A/B testing allows you to discover which variations prompt the desired actions.
    • Headlines : Crafting compelling headlines is an art. Test different versions to identify which headlines resonate best with your audience, whether they are more drawn to clarity, humour, urgency or curiosity.
    • Images : Test different images to understand your audience’s visual preferences. This could include product images, lifestyle shots or graphics.
    Matomo A/B Test feature

    With Matomo’s A/B testing feature, you can test various elements to see which is successful in converting visitors or moving them to the next stage of the conversion funnel.

    9. Leverage social proof

    In an era where consumers are inundated with choices, the opinions, reviews and endorsements of others serve as beacons, guiding potential customers through the decision-making process. 

    Simply put — when people see that others have had positive experiences with your brand, it instils trust and confidence.

    Importance of social proof

    You can proactively gather social proof and display it prominently across your marketing channels. Here are some examples of social proof you can leverage :

    • Customer reviews : Positive reviews and testimonials from satisfied customers serve as authentic endorsements of your products or services. 
    • Case studies : In-depth case studies that showcase successful collaborations or solutions provided to clients offer a detailed narrative of your brand’s capabilities. These are particularly effective in B2B scenarios or for complex products and services.
    • User-generated content : Encourage customers to share their experiences. This could include photos, videos or posts on social media platforms, providing a dynamic and genuine portrayal of your brand.
    • Influencer endorsements : Collaborating with influencers in your industry or niche can amplify your social proof. When influencers vouch for your products or services, their followers are more likely to take notice.

    10. Measure and analyse performance

    This is a continuous loop of refinement, where you should use analysis and data-driven insights to guide your conversion funnel optimisation efforts.

    Here’s a systematic approach you can take :

    1. Identify the path users take on your site using a feature like Users Flow.
    2. Map the customer journey using a Funnels feature like the one in Matomo. 
    3. Identify the metrics that align with your conversion goals at each stage of the funnel, such as website traffic, conversion rates, click-through rates and customer acquisition costs.
    4. Assess conversion rates at different stages of the funnel. Identify areas with significant drop-offs and investigate factors that might contribute to the decline.
    5. Use heatmaps and session recordings to see first-hand how users interact with your site.
    6. Create an experiment to test and improve a specific area within your funnel using insights from the heatmaps and session recordings.
    7. A/B test, analyse the results to understand which variations performed better. Use this data to refine elements within your funnel.

    See how Concrete CMS 3x their leads with conversion optimisation.

    Conclusion 

    The customer journey is not linear. However, it involves a few specific stages your audience will go through — from first learning about your product or services to considering whether to try it. The goal is to turn them into happy and loyal customers.

    In this article, we went over strategies and practical tips you can use to guide customers through the conversion funnel. From segmenting your audience to capturing leads, optimising landing pages and running A/B tests, there are steps you can take to ensure your audience will move to the next stage.

    And of course, you have to continuously measure and analyse your performance. That’s how you know whether you’re heading in the right direction and, if not, where to correct your course. 

    For that, you need a robust web analytics solution with conversion optimisation features. Try Matomo free for 21 days and start optimising your conversion funnel—no credit card required. 

  • I have an application in flask where it streams a camera using ffmpeg, the problem is that I can not display the video from the camera using the GPU [closed]

    17 janvier, par Ruben

    I'll put you in context, I am using flask (python) to display a camera in the browser to stream it, for this I use the following Python code :

    


    command = [
     'ffmpeg',
     '-loglevel', 'warning',
     '-rtsp_transport', 'tcp',
     '-i', self.config['url'],
     '-map', '0:v:0', # fuerzo que solo procese el video
     '-vf', f'fps={self.config["fps"]},scale=640:360:force_original_aspect_ratio=decrease',
     '-c:v', 'h264_nvenc', # especificamos que queremos tirar de la gpu de nvidia
     '-preset', 'p7', # ajusta para la maxima calidad/velocidad (p1 mas rapida pero peor calidad - p7 más lento pero mejor calidad)
     '-qp', self.config['quality'], # control de calidad del codificador (0 [mejor calidad] - 51 [peor calidad])
     '-pix_fmt', 'yuv444p', # se mete explicitamente el formato de pixeles
     '-color_range', 'pc',
     '-an', # desactiva el audio
     '-f', 'image2pipe',
     'pipe:1'
] 

self.process = subprocess.Popen(
   command,
   stdout=subprocess.PIPE,
   stderr=subprocess.PIPE,
   bufsize=10**8
)


    


    The problem is that it does not display the video streaming, but it connects correctly to the camera.

    


    On the other hand, It show me the following warnings, which may have something to do with the display, it's probably the second warning that has to do with the pixel format :

    


    DEBUG :main:FFmpeg [camera1] : Guessed Channel Layout for Input Stream #0.1 : mono
DEBUG :main:FFmpeg [camera1] : [swscaler @ 0x560f70b78680] deprecated pixel format used, make sure you did set range correctly

    


    The server has different encodes installed :

    


    DEV.LS h264 H.264 / AVC / MPEG-4 AVC / MPEG-4 part 10 (decoders : h264 h264_v4l2m2m h264_qsv h264_cuvid ) (encoders : libx264 libx264rgb h264_nvenc h264_omx h264_qsv h264_v4l2m2m h264_vaapi nvenc nvenc_h264 )

    


    Y uso el h264_nvenc, tambien el servidor tiene soporte de aceleración de hardware con :

    


    libavutil 56. 70.100 / 56. 70.100
libavcodec 58.134.100 / 58.134.100
libavformat 58. 76.100 / 58. 76.100
libavdevice 58. 13.100 / 58. 13.100
libavfilter 7.110.100 / 7.110.100
libswscale 5. 9.100 / 5. 9.100
libswresample 3. 9.100 / 3. 9.100
libpostproc 55. 9.100 / 55. 9.100
Hardware acceleration methods :
vdpau
cuda
vaapi
qsv
drm
opencl

    


    Between them h264_nvenc uses cuda

    


    I expand a little on the information it provides me when using h264_nvenc :

    


    Encoder h264_nvenc [NVIDIA NVENC H.264 encoder]:&#xA;    General capabilities: dr1 delay hardware&#xA;    Threading capabilities: none&#xA;    Supported hardware devices: cuda cuda&#xA;    Supported pixel formats: yuv420p nv12 p010le yuv444p p016le yuv444p16le bgr0 rgb0 cuda&#xA;h264_nvenc AVOptions:&#xA;  -preset            <int>        E..V....... Set the encoding preset (from 0 to 18) (default p4)&#xA;     default         0            E..V.......&#xA;     slow            1            E..V....... hq 2 passes&#xA;     medium          2            E..V....... hq 1 pass&#xA;     fast            3            E..V....... hp 1 pass&#xA;     hp              4            E..V.......&#xA;     hq              5            E..V.......&#xA;     bd              6            E..V.......&#xA;     ll              7            E..V....... low latency&#xA;     llhq            8            E..V....... low latency hq&#xA;     llhp            9            E..V....... low latency hp&#xA;     lossless        10           E..V.......&#xA;     losslesshp      11           E..V.......&#xA;     p1              12           E..V....... fastest (lowest quality)&#xA;     p2              13           E..V....... faster (lower quality)&#xA;     p3              14           E..V....... fast (low quality)&#xA;     p4              15           E..V....... medium (default)&#xA;     p5              16           E..V....... slow (good quality)&#xA;     p6              17           E..V....... slower (better quality)&#xA;     p7              18           E..V....... slowest (best quality)&#xA;  -tune              <int>        E..V....... Set the encoding tuning info (from 1 to 4) (default hq)&#xA;     hq              1            E..V....... High quality&#xA;     ll              2            E..V....... Low latency&#xA;     ull             3            E..V....... Ultra low latency&#xA;     lossless        4            E..V....... Lossless&#xA;  -profile           <int>        E..V....... Set the encoding profile (from 0 to 3) (default main)&#xA;     baseline        0            E..V.......&#xA;     main            1            E..V.......&#xA;     high            2            E..V.......&#xA;     high444p        3            E..V.......&#xA;  -level             <int>        E..V....... Set the encoding level restriction (from 0 to 62) (default auto)&#xA;     auto            0            E..V.......&#xA;     1               10           E..V.......&#xA;     1.0             10           E..V.......&#xA;     1b              9            E..V.......&#xA;     1.0b            9            E..V.......&#xA;     1.1             11           E..V.......&#xA;     1.2             12           E..V.......&#xA;     1.3             13           E..V.......&#xA;     2               20           E..V.......&#xA;     2.0             20           E..V.......&#xA;     2.1             21           E..V.......&#xA;     2.2             22           E..V.......&#xA;     3               30           E..V.......&#xA;     3.0             30           E..V.......&#xA;     3.1             31           E..V.......&#xA;     3.2             32           E..V.......&#xA;     4               40           E..V.......&#xA;     4.0             40           E..V.......&#xA;     4.1             41           E..V.......&#xA;     4.2             42           E..V.......&#xA;     5               50           E..V.......&#xA;     5.0             50           E..V.......&#xA;     5.1             51           E..V.......&#xA;     5.2             52           E..V.......&#xA;     6.0             60           E..V.......&#xA;     6.1             61           E..V.......&#xA;     6.2             62           E..V.......&#xA;  -rc                <int>        E..V....... Override the preset rate-control (from -1 to INT_MAX) (default -1)&#xA;     constqp         0            E..V....... Constant QP mode&#xA;     vbr             1            E..V....... Variable bitrate mode&#xA;     cbr             2            E..V....... Constant bitrate mode&#xA;     vbr_minqp       8388612      E..V....... Variable bitrate mode with MinQP (deprecated)&#xA;     ll_2pass_quality 8388616      E..V....... Multi-pass optimized for image quality (deprecated)&#xA;     ll_2pass_size   8388624      E..V....... Multi-pass optimized for constant frame size (deprecated)&#xA;     vbr_2pass       8388640      E..V....... Multi-pass variable bitrate mode (deprecated)&#xA;     cbr_ld_hq       8388616      E..V....... Constant bitrate low delay high quality mode&#xA;     cbr_hq          8388624      E..V....... Constant bitrate high quality mode&#xA;     vbr_hq          8388640      E..V....... Variable bitrate high quality mode&#xA;  -rc-lookahead      <int>        E..V....... Number of frames to look ahead for rate-control (from 0 to INT_MAX) (default 0)&#xA;  -surfaces          <int>        E..V....... Number of concurrent surfaces (from 0 to 64) (default 0)&#xA;  -cbr               <boolean>    E..V....... Use cbr encoding mode (default false)&#xA;  -2pass             <boolean>    E..V....... Use 2pass encoding mode (default auto)&#xA;  -gpu               <int>        E..V....... Selects which NVENC capable GPU to use. First GPU is 0, second is 1, and so on. (from -2 to INT_MAX) (default any)&#xA;     any             -1           E..V....... Pick the first device available&#xA;     list            -2           E..V....... List the available devices&#xA;  -delay             <int>        E..V....... Delay frame output by the given amount of frames (from 0 to INT_MAX) (default INT_MAX)&#xA;  -no-scenecut       <boolean>    E..V....... When lookahead is enabled, set this to 1 to disable adaptive I-frame insertion at scene cuts (default false)&#xA;  -forced-idr        <boolean>    E..V....... If forcing keyframes, force them as IDR frames. (default false)&#xA;  -b_adapt           <boolean>    E..V....... When lookahead is enabled, set this to 0 to disable adaptive B-frame decision (default true)&#xA;  -spatial-aq        <boolean>    E..V....... set to 1 to enable Spatial AQ (default false)&#xA;  -spatial_aq        <boolean>    E..V....... set to 1 to enable Spatial AQ (default false)&#xA;  -temporal-aq       <boolean>    E..V....... set to 1 to enable Temporal AQ (default false)&#xA;  -temporal_aq       <boolean>    E..V....... set to 1 to enable Temporal AQ (default false)&#xA;  -zerolatency       <boolean>    E..V....... Set 1 to indicate zero latency operation (no reordering delay) (default false)&#xA;  -nonref_p          <boolean>    E..V....... Set this to 1 to enable automatic insertion of non-reference P-frames (default false)&#xA;  -strict_gop        <boolean>    E..V....... Set 1 to minimize GOP-to-GOP rate fluctuations (default false)&#xA;  -aq-strength       <int>        E..V....... When Spatial AQ is enabled, this field is used to specify AQ strength. AQ strength scale is from 1 (low) - 15 (aggressive) (from 1 to 15) (default 8)&#xA;  -cq                <float>      E..V....... Set target quality level (0 to 51, 0 means automatic) for constant quality mode in VBR rate control (from 0 to 51) (default 0)&#xA;  -aud               <boolean>    E..V....... Use access unit delimiters (default false)&#xA;  -bluray-compat     <boolean>    E..V....... Bluray compatibility workarounds (default false)&#xA;  -init_qpP          <int>        E..V....... Initial QP value for P frame (from -1 to 51) (default -1)&#xA;  -init_qpB          <int>        E..V....... Initial QP value for B frame (from -1 to 51) (default -1)&#xA;  -init_qpI          <int>        E..V....... Initial QP value for I frame (from -1 to 51) (default -1)&#xA;  -qp                <int>        E..V....... Constant quantization parameter rate control method (from -1 to 51) (default -1)&#xA;  -weighted_pred     <int>        E..V....... Set 1 to enable weighted prediction (from 0 to 1) (default 0)&#xA;  -coder             <int>        E..V....... Coder type (from -1 to 2) (default default)&#xA;     default         -1           E..V.......&#xA;     auto            0            E..V.......&#xA;     cabac           1            E..V.......&#xA;     cavlc           2            E..V.......&#xA;     ac              1            E..V.......&#xA;     vlc             2            E..V.......&#xA;  -b_ref_mode        <int>        E..V....... Use B frames as references (from 0 to 2) (default disabled)&#xA;     disabled        0            E..V....... B frames will not be used for reference&#xA;     each            1            E..V....... Each B frame will be used for reference&#xA;     middle          2            E..V....... Only (number of B frames)/2 will be used for reference&#xA;  -a53cc             <boolean>    E..V....... Use A53 Closed Captions (if available) (default true)&#xA;  -dpb_size          <int>        E..V....... Specifies the DPB size used for encoding (0 means automatic) (from 0 to INT_MAX) (default 0)&#xA;  -multipass         <int>        E..V....... Set the multipass encoding (from 0 to 2) (default disabled)&#xA;     disabled        0            E..V....... Single Pass&#xA;     qres            1            E..V....... Two Pass encoding is enabled where first Pass is quarter resolution&#xA;     fullres         2            E..V....... Two Pass encoding is enabled where first Pass is full resolution&#xA;  -ldkfs             <int>        E..V....... Low delay key frame scale; Specifies the Scene Change frame size increase allowed in case of single frame VBV and CBR (from 0 to 255) (default 0)&#xA;</int></int></int></boolean></int></int></int></int></int></int></int></boolean></boolean></float></int></boolean></boolean></boolean></boolean></boolean></boolean></boolean></boolean></boolean></boolean></int></int></boolean></boolean></int></int></int></int></int></int></int>

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    If anyone has some idea or needs more information to help me, I would appreciate it.

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