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    13 juin 2013

    Puis-je poster des contenus à partir d’une tablette Ipad ?
    Oui, si votre Médiaspip installé est à la version 0.2 ou supérieure. Contacter au besoin l’administrateur de votre MédiaSpip pour le savoir

  • Ajouter notes et légendes aux images

    7 février 2011, par

    Pour pouvoir ajouter notes et légendes aux images, la première étape est d’installer le plugin "Légendes".
    Une fois le plugin activé, vous pouvez le configurer dans l’espace de configuration afin de modifier les droits de création / modification et de suppression des notes. Par défaut seuls les administrateurs du site peuvent ajouter des notes aux images.
    Modification lors de l’ajout d’un média
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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.
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Sur d’autres sites (4527)

  • Merging mp4 files issue [duplicate]

    8 août 2019, par user1088259

    This question already has an answer here :

    Trying merge 3 mp4 files. Everything works in principle, but there is one thing. The audio middle2.mp4 flows onto the videoend.mp4. I tried all the possible options. Whats wrong ?

    ffmpeg -i D:\ttt\start.mp4   -vcodec copy -bsf:v h264_mp4toannexb -f mpegts d:\ttt\f1.ts
    ffmpeg -i D:\ttt\middle2.mp4 -vcodec copy -bsf:v h264_mp4toannexb -f mpegts d:\ttt\f2.ts
    ffmpeg -i D:\ttt\finish.mp4 -vcodec copy -bsf:v h264_mp4toannexb -f mpegts d:\ttt\f3.ts

    ffmpeg -i "concat:d:\ttt\f1.ts|d:\ttt\f2.ts|d:\ttt\f3.ts"  -vcodec copy -bsf:a aac_adtstoasc d:\ttt\RESULT.mp4

    введите сюда описание изображения
    введите сюда описание изображения
    введите сюда описание изображения

  • Cannot open connection tcp ://localhost:1935 when to set up custom RTMP stream

    8 janvier 2021, par showkey

    My simple network is as following :

    


    192.168.31.52 is my local pc 
192.168.31.251 is an ip camera.


    


    I can open the stream rtsp://192.168.31.251/cam/realmonitor?channel=1&subtype=0 with SMPlayer.
    
Build my nginx for customizing RTMP stream this way.

    


    sudo apt update
sudo apt install build-essential git
sudo apt install libpcre3-dev libssl-dev zlib1g-dev 
git clone https://github.com/arut/nginx-rtmp-module.git
git clone https://github.com/nginx/nginx.git
cd nginx
./auto/configure --add-module=../nginx-rtmp-module
make
sudo make install


    


    Set config file for nginx :

    


    sudo vim /usr/local/nginx/conf/nginx.conf
rtmp { 
    server { 
        listen 1935; 
        application live { 
            live on; 
            interleave on;
 
            hls on; 
            hls_path /tmp/hls; 
            hls_fragment 15s; 
        } 
    } 
} 


    


    Then set permission for nginx :

    


    mkdir /tmp/hls
sudo chmod -R 755  /tmp/hls
sudo chown -R www-data:www-data  /tmp/hls


    


    Edit index.html in /tmp/hls.

    


    <p>test for nginx</p>&#xA;

    &#xA;

    Both 127.0.0.1/index.html and 192.168.31.52/index.html can open the /tmp/hls/index.html.

    &#xA;

    Now open port 1935 on my network :

    &#xA;

    sudo firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=1935/tcp --permanent&#xA;sudo firewall-cmd --reload &#xA;sudo firewall-cmd --list-ports | grep 1935&#xA;1935/tcp&#xA;

    &#xA;

    Start nginx :

    &#xA;

    sudo systemctl start nginx&#xA;

    &#xA;

    Up stream the rtsp stream from ip camera—192.168.31.251 to local pc —192.168.31.52.

    &#xA;

    input="rtsp://192.168.31.251/cam/realmonitor?channel=1&amp;subtype=0"&#xA;output="rtmp://192.168.31.52:1935/live/sample"&#xA;ffmpeg -i $input -acodec aac -strict experimental -ar 44100 -ac 2 -b:a 96k -r 25 -b:v 500k -s 640*480 -f flv $output&#xA;

    &#xA;

    It encounter the following errors :

    &#xA;

    [tcp @ 0x59fb700] Connection to tcp://192.168.31.52:1935 failed: Connection refused&#xA;[rtmp @ 0x59fc5c0] Cannot open connection tcp://192.168.31.52:1935&#xA;rtmp://192.168.31.52:1935/live/sample: Connection refused&#xA;

    &#xA;

    How can fix it ?

    &#xA;

  • Vedanti and Max Sound vs. Google

    14 août 2014, par Multimedia Mike — Legal/Ethical

    Vedanti Systems Limited (VSL) and Max Sound Coporation filed a lawsuit against Google recently. Ordinarily, I wouldn’t care about corporate legal battles. However, this one interests me because it’s multimedia-related. I’m curious to know how coding technology patents might hold up in a real court case.

    Here’s the most entertaining complaint in the lawsuit :

    Despite Google’s well-publicized Code of Conduct — “Don’t be Evil” — which it explains is “about doing the right thing,” “following the law,” and “acting honorably,” Google, in fact, has an established pattern of conduct which is the exact opposite of its claimed piety.

    I wonder if this is the first known case in which Google has been sued over its long-obsoleted “Don’t be evil” mantra ?

    Researching The Plaintiffs

    I think I made a mistake by assuming this lawsuit might have merit. My first order of business was to see what the plaintiff organizations have produced. I have a strong feeling that these might be run of the mill patent trolls.

    VSL currently has a blank web page. Further, the Wayback Machine only has pages reaching back to 2011. The earliest page lists these claims against a plain black background (I’ve highlighted some of the more boisterous claims and the passages that make it appear that Vedanti doesn’t actually produce anything but is strictly an IP organization) :

    The inventions key :
    The patent and software reduced any data content, without compressing, up to a 97% total reduction of the data which also produces a lossless result. This physics based invention is often called the Holy Grail.

    Vedanti Systems Intellectual Property
    Our strategic IP portfolio is granted in all of the world’s largest technology development and use countries. A major value indemnification of our licensee products is the early date of invention filing and subsequent Issue. Vedanti IP has an intrinsic 20 year patent protection and valuation in royalties and licensing. The original data transmission art has no prior art against it.

    Vedanti Systems invented among other firsts, The Slice and Partitioning of Macroblocks within a RGB Tri level region in a frame to select or not, the pixel.

    Vedanti Systems invention is used in nearly every wireless chipset and handset in the world

    Our original pixel selection system revolutionized wireless handset communications. An example of this system “Slice” and “Macroblock Partitioning” is used throughout Satellite channel expansion, Wireless partitioning, Telecom – Video Conferencing, Surveillance Cameras, and 2010 developing Media applications.

    Vedanti Systems is a Semiconductor based software, applications, and IP Continuations Intellectual Property company.

    Let’s move onto the other plaintiff, Max Sound. They have a significantly more substantive website. They also have an Android app named Spins HD Audio, which appears to be little more than a music player based on the screenshots.

    Max Sound also has a stock ticker symbol : MAXD. Something clicked into place when I looked up their ticker symbol : While worth only a few pennies, it was worth a few more pennies after this lawsuit was announced, which might be one of the motivations behind the lawsuit.

    Here’s a trick I learned when I was looking for a new tech job last year : When I first look at a company’s website and am trying to figure out what they really do, I head straight to their jobs/careers page. A lot of corporate websites have way too much blathering corporatese that can be tough to cut through. But when I see what mix of talent and specific skills they are hoping to hire, that gives me a much better portrait of what the company does.

    The reason I bring this up is because this tech company doesn’t seem to have jobs/careers page.

    The Lawsuit
    The core complaint centers around Patent 7974339 : Optimized data transmission system and method. It was filed in July 2004 (or possibly as early as January 2002), issued in July 2011, and assigned (purchased ?) by Vedanti in May 2012. The lawsuit alleges that nearly everything Google has ever produced (or, more accurately, purchased) leverages the patented technology.

    The patent itself has 5 drawings. If you’ve ever seen a multimedia codec patent, or any whitepaper on a multimedia codec, you’ve seen these graphs before. E.g., “Raw pixels come in here -> some analysis happens here -> more analysis happens over here -> entropy coding -> final bitstream”. The text of a patent document isn’t meant to be particularly useful. I’ve tried to understand this stuff before and it never goes well. Skimming the text, I just see a blur of the words data, transmission, pixel, and matrix.

    So I read the complaint to try to figure out what this is all about. To summarize the storyline as narrated by the lawsuit, some inventors were unhappy with the state of video compression in 2001 and endeavored to create something better. So they did, and called it the VSL codec. This codec is so far undocumented on the MultimediaWiki, so it probably has yet to be seen “in the wild”. Good luck finding hard technical data on it now since searches for “VSL codec” are overwhelmed by articles about this lawsuit. Also, the original codec probably wasn’t called VSL because VSL is apparently an IP organization formed much later.

    Then, the protagonists of the lawsuit patented the codec. Then, years later, Google wanted to purchase a video codec that they could open source and use to supplant H.264.

    The complaint goes on to allege that in 2010, Google specifically contacted VSL to possibly license or acquire this mysterious VSL technology. Google was allegedly allowed to study the technology, eventually decided not to continue discussions, and shipped back the proprietary materials.

    Here’s where things get weird. When Google shipped back the materials, they allegedly shipped back a bunch of Post-It notes. The notes are alleged to contain a ton of incriminating evidence. The lawsuit claims that the notes contained such tidbits as :

    • Google was concerned that its infringement could be considered “recklessness” (the standard applicable to willful infringement) ;
    • Google personnel should “try” to destroy incriminating emails ;
    • Google should consider a “design around” because it was facing a “risk of litigation.”

    Actually, given Google’s acquisition of On2, I can totally believe that last one (On2’s codecs have famously contained a lot of weirdness which is commonly suspected to be attributable to designing around known patents).

    Anyway, a lot of this case seems to hinge on the authenticity of these Post-It notes :

    “65. The Post-It notes are unequivocal evidence of Google’s knowledge of the ’339 Patent and infringement by Defendants”

    I wish I could find a stock photo of a stack of Post-It notes in an evidence bag.

    I’ve worked at big technology companies. Big tech companies these days are very diligent about indoctrinating employees about IP liability issues. The reason this Post-It situation strikes me as odd is because the alleged contents of the notes basically outline everything the corporate lawyers tell you NOT to do.

    Analysis
    I’m trying to determine what specific algorithms and coding techniques. I guess I was expecting to see a specific claim that, “Our patent outlines this specific coding technique and here is unequivocal proof that Google A) uses the same technique, and B) specifically did so after looking at our patent.” I didn’t find that (well, a bit of part B, c.f., the Post-It note debacle), but maybe that’s not how these patent lawsuits operate. I’ve never kept up before.

    Maybe it’s just a patent troll. Maybe it’s for the stock bump. I’m expecting to see pump-n-dump stock spam featuring the stock symbol MAXD anytime now.

    I’ve never been interested in following a lawsuit case carefully before. I suddenly find myself wondering if I can subscribe to the RSS feed for this case ? Too much to hope for. But I found this item through Pando and maybe they’ll stay on top of it.