
Recherche avancée
Médias (10)
-
Demon Seed
26 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
-
Demon seed (wav version)
26 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
-
The four of us are dying (wav version)
26 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
-
Corona radiata (wav version)
26 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
-
Lights in the sky (wav version)
26 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
-
Head down (wav version)
26 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
Autres articles (36)
-
Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins
27 avril 2010, parMediaspip core
autoriser_auteur_modifier() afin que les visiteurs soient capables de modifier leurs informations sur la page d’auteurs -
Support de tous types de médias
10 avril 2011Contrairement à beaucoup de logiciels et autres plate-formes modernes de partage de documents, MediaSPIP a l’ambition de gérer un maximum de formats de documents différents qu’ils soient de type : images (png, gif, jpg, bmp et autres...) ; audio (MP3, Ogg, Wav et autres...) ; vidéo (Avi, MP4, Ogv, mpg, mov, wmv et autres...) ; contenu textuel, code ou autres (open office, microsoft office (tableur, présentation), web (html, css), LaTeX, Google Earth) (...)
-
Other interesting software
13 avril 2011, parWe don’t claim to be the only ones doing what we do ... and especially not to assert claims to be the best either ... What we do, we just try to do it well and getting better ...
The following list represents softwares that tend to be more or less as MediaSPIP or that MediaSPIP tries more or less to do the same, whatever ...
We don’t know them, we didn’t try them, but you can take a peek.
Videopress
Website : http://videopress.com/
License : GNU/GPL v2
Source code : (...)
Sur d’autres sites (8368)
-
How Many Default Languages ?
26 janvier 2012, par Multimedia Mike — ProgrammingI was thinking back to my childhood, when my family first owned a computer. It was an MS-DOS-powered IBM PC. The default OS came with 2 programming environments, such as they were : GW-BASIC and batch files. It was a start, I suppose. I guess most any microcomputer you can name from that era came with some kind of BASIC interpreter. That defined the computer’s “out of the box” programmability.
Then I started wondering how this compares to computers (operating systems/distributions, really) these days. So I installed a fresh version of the latest Ubuntu Linux version (11.10 as of this writing ; x86_32) and looked for programmability (without installing anything else). This is what I came up with :
- gcc/C (only the C compiler ; other components of the GNU compiler collection are installed separately)
- Perl
- Python
- C#, as furnished by Mono
- Bash — can’t forget about the shell as a full-featured programming language (sh is also present, but not t/csh)
- JavaScript — since Firefox is installed per default, JS counts
- GNU Assember — thanks to Reimar for the reminder that if gcc is present, gas necessarily needs to be there as well
I checked on C++, Objective C, Java, Ada, Fortran, Go, Lua, Ruby, Tcl, PHP, R and other languages I could think of, but the above items were the only ones present by default. At the same time, I checked my Mac OS X (10.6) box and it also has Ruby and PHP installed. It has a bunch of other languages, courtesy of Xcode, so I can’t certify anything about its out of the box programmability.
Still, I think “embarrassment of riches” pretty well sums it up. I try not to be crotchety old fogey complaining that kids these days don’t know how good they have it ; rather, I’m genuinely excited for anyone who wants to leap into computer programming in this day and age.
-
FFMPEG - changing pixel format from 24-bit RGB to 8-bit Grayscale does not change file size
26 septembre 2018, par Minjun SeongI am using the avlib* libraries and currently using the sws_getContext function to change pixel format from RGB (AV_PIX_FMT_RGB24) to grayscale (AV_PIX_FMT_GRAY8). The expected behavior should have been that the output file size should have decreased by 3 times, but it stayed the same. Furthermore, when I checked on Media-Coder to see the format, the video format was still RGB. Any ideas on why the file size didn’t change and why the file format is still RGB ?
Note : the video DID change to black and white as expected.
-
How to specify text-only subtitles in ffmpeg
20 juin 2019, par Daniel EngelI’m trying to script some basic DVD-to-home media server processing. One of the things I’m trying to do, which seems like it should be pretty basic, is extract the text (srt) subtitles from the .mp4 file from the initial rip.
I can see the stream, and if I select the stream explicitly (by stream number), I can extract it. However, I want to script the ffmpeg command. If I try to just specify the subtitle stream with a -map option, it maps the first subtitle stream, which is often a bitmap stream instead of text stream.
So, after ripping some of my DVD’s, I’d like to process everything in a batch script, something like :
for video in *.mp4; do
...
(special code to get $subtitle filename with .srt instead of .mp4)
ffmpeg -i "$video" -map 0:s "$subtitle"
...
doneI’d like the "-map" option to cause ffmpeg to select only text-based subtitles (like mov_text), and not, for example, dvd_subtitle, irrespective of which is first in the list of streams.
Does anybody know of a way to do this ?