Recherche avancée

Médias (0)

Mot : - Tags -/gis

Aucun média correspondant à vos critères n’est disponible sur le site.

Autres articles (78)

  • 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 (...)

  • MediaSPIP Player : problèmes potentiels

    22 février 2011, par

    Le 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, (...)

  • 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 (4926)

  • Trying to compile x264 and ffmpeg for iPhone - "missing required architecture arm in file"

    11 février 2013, par jtrim

    I'm trying to compile x264 for use in an iPhone application. I see there are instructions on how to compile ffmpeg for use on the platform here : http://lists.mplayerhq.hu/pipermail/ffmpeg-devel/2009-October/076618.html , but I can't seem to find anything this complete for compiling x264 on the iPhone. I've found this source tree : http://gitorious.org/x264-arm that seems to have support for the ARM platform.

    Here is my config line :

    ./configure —cross-prefix=/usr/bin/ —host=arm-apple-darwin10 —extra-cflags="-B /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS3.2.sdk/usr/lib/ -I /Developer/Platforms/iPhoneOS.platform/Developer/SDKs/iPhoneOS3.2.sdk/usr/lib/"
    

    ...and inside configure I'm using the gas-preprocessor script (first link above) as my assembler :

    gas-preprocessor.pl gcc
    

    When I start compiling, it chunks away for a little while, then it spits out these warnings and a huge list of undefined symbols :

    ld : warning : option -s is obsolete and being ignored
    ld : warning : -force_cpusubtype_ALL will become unsupported for ARM architectures
    ld : warning : in /usr/lib/crt1.o, missing required architecture arm in file
    ld : warning : in /usr/X11R6/lib/libX11.dylib, missing required architecture arm in file
    ld : warning : in /usr/lib/libm.dylib, missing required architecture arm in file
    ld : warning : in /usr/lib/libpthread.dylib, missing required architecture arm in file
    ld : warning : in /usr/lib/libgcc_s.1.dylib, missing required architecture arm in file
    ld : warning : in /usr/lib/libSystem.dylib, missing required architecture arm in file
    Undefined symbols :
    

    My guess would be that the problem has to do with the "missing required architecture arm in file" warning...any ideas ?

  • Truly live streaming to Android/iPhone

    4 juillet 2012, par Tsaukpaetra

    I have spent quite a while (past week) trying this to little avail. However, what I want seems completely unheard of. So far, I have reviewed recommendations available through google, which include encoding a static file into multiple static files in different formats, creating a playlist that hosts static files in an m3u8 file (files which get added to the playlist as streaming continues).
    I have also seen ideas involving rtmp, rtsp etc which are completely out of the question because of their incompatibility.
    Ideally, I would have one webpage that would link to the stream (http://server/video.mp4) and/or show it in a webpage (via the video tag). With that in mind, the most likely format would be h264+aac in mp4 container.

    Unfortunately, (and probably because the file has no duration metadata) it does not work. I can use a desktop player (such as VLC) to open the stream and play it, but my iPhone and Android both give their respective "Can't be played" messages.

    I don't think the problem is caused by the devices' ability to stream, for I have made a streaming shoutcast server work just fine (mp3 only).

    Currently, the closest I have become is using the following setup on my win32 machine :

    FFMPEG Command: : ffmpeg -f dshow -i video="Logitech Webcam 200":audio="Microphone (Webcam 200)" -b:v 180k -bt 240k -vcodec libx264 -tune zerolatency -profile:v baseline -preset ultrafast -r 10 -strict -2 -acodec aac -ac 2 -ar 48000 -ab 32k -f flv "udp ://127.0.0.1:1234"

    VLC: : Stream from udp ://127.0.0.1:1234 to http:// :8080/video.mp4 (No Transcoding), basically just to convert the UDP stream into an http-accessible stream.

    Any hints or suggestions would be warmly welcomed !

  • How to get rid of iPhone pointer uint8_t warning ?

    18 décembre 2012, par Winston

    I'm using FFMPeg on my iPhone project, but I'm getting a warning when using AVFrame *pFrame, like this :

    AVFrame *pFrame
    uint8_t *data[AV_NUM_DATA_POINTERS];

    ...

    pFrame->data

    This is the warning I'm getting :

    Passing 'uint8_t *[8]' to parameter of type 'const uint8_t *const *' (aka 'const unsigned char *const *') discards qualifiers in nested pointer types

    How do I get rid of this warning ?

    Thank you !