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Médias (1)
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MediaSPIP Simple : futur thème graphique par défaut ?
26 septembre 2013, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2013
Langue : français
Type : Video
Autres articles (7)
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Emballe Médias : Mettre en ligne simplement des documents
29 octobre 2010, parLe 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 (...) -
Prérequis à l’installation
31 janvier 2010, parPréambule
Cet article n’a pas pour but de détailler les installations de ces logiciels mais plutôt de donner des informations sur leur configuration spécifique.
Avant toute chose SPIPMotion tout comme MediaSPIP est fait pour tourner sur des distributions Linux de type Debian ou dérivées (Ubuntu...). Les documentations de ce site se réfèrent donc à ces distributions. Il est également possible de l’utiliser sur d’autres distributions Linux mais aucune garantie de bon fonctionnement n’est possible.
Il (...) -
Menus personnalisés
14 novembre 2010, parMediaSPIP utilise le plugin Menus pour gérer plusieurs menus configurables pour la navigation.
Cela permet de laisser aux administrateurs de canaux la possibilité de configurer finement ces menus.
Menus créés à l’initialisation du site
Par défaut trois menus sont créés automatiquement à l’initialisation du site : Le menu principal ; Identifiant : barrenav ; Ce menu s’insère en général en haut de la page après le bloc d’entête, son identifiant le rend compatible avec les squelettes basés sur Zpip ; (...)
Sur d’autres sites (4267)
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How can I capture low resolution video on Android reliably across a range of devices ?
26 octobre 2015, par MisterMatHello Android video experts :)
I am developing an Android application which allows the user to capture video and upload it to a remote server (it’s more involved than that but the rest of the app is not important). Because of the upload requirement, it is important that the video is of a reasonable size, so not super high resolution. Let’s say a max of 680x480 or 10Mb/minute. This is no problem on Apple devices.
I have had what can only be described as a complete nightmare trying to capture video at a reasonably low bitrate reliably across a range of Android devices.
As I understand it there are two ways of capturing video on Android :
1) Using the Media Recorder/Camera API
2) Using an Intent to open the cameras video capture application
Option 1) gives the most flexibility and allows us to easily change the capture resolution. However the Android Camera API is NOT reliable across a range of devices, and I have very good information (including from someone who liaised with Google on this issue) that if you capture video using this API then it will crash on a good 50% of the devices out there. There is a reason that Zoom Camera FX uses an Intent for video capture. Zoom Camera (different app) seems to use Media Recorder, but has lots of bad reviews for video crashing or not working.
Option 2) works well across a range of devices, as it uses the in built application on the device. The trouble is you have no control whatsoever on the resolution, there is a quality hint on the Intent but the camera app will normally ignore this. My Samsung Galaxy S3 records video by default at about 2Mb/s. This is way too high resolution. The built in application can of course change the resolution, but this relies on action by the user which is difficult to control.
I understand that I could use a library such as ffmpeg to change the resolution of the video after capture. However this requires me to compile the library for Android, and also I have been informed that in order to legally use the decode/encode codecs on the device you have to pay license fees that amount to about $1 per copy of the app. Since this app will be free to use, this is not an option.
So that’s where I’m at. I’ve searched long and high for answers, but I can’t figure out how to capture low resolution video reliably using Android.
Any help very much appreciated !
Matthew
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How can I capture low resolution video on Android reliably across a range of devices ?
8 décembre 2017, par MisterMatHello Android video experts :)
I am developing an Android application which allows the user to capture video and upload it to a remote server (it’s more involved than that but the rest of the app is not important). Because of the upload requirement, it is important that the video is of a reasonable size, so not super high resolution. Let’s say a max of 680x480 or 10Mb/minute. This is no problem on Apple devices.
I have had what can only be described as a complete nightmare trying to capture video at a reasonably low bitrate reliably across a range of Android devices.
As I understand it there are two ways of capturing video on Android :
1) Using the Media Recorder/Camera API
2) Using an Intent to open the cameras video capture application
Option 1) gives the most flexibility and allows us to easily change the capture resolution. However the Android Camera API is NOT reliable across a range of devices, and I have very good information (including from someone who liaised with Google on this issue) that if you capture video using this API then it will crash on a good 50% of the devices out there. There is a reason that Zoom Camera FX uses an Intent for video capture. Zoom Camera (different app) seems to use Media Recorder, but has lots of bad reviews for video crashing or not working.
Option 2) works well across a range of devices, as it uses the in built application on the device. The trouble is you have no control whatsoever on the resolution, there is a quality hint on the Intent but the camera app will normally ignore this. My Samsung Galaxy S3 records video by default at about 2Mb/s. This is way too high resolution. The built in application can of course change the resolution, but this relies on action by the user which is difficult to control.
I understand that I could use a library such as ffmpeg to change the resolution of the video after capture. However this requires me to compile the library for Android, and also I have been informed that in order to legally use the decode/encode codecs on the device you have to pay license fees that amount to about $1 per copy of the app. Since this app will be free to use, this is not an option.
So that’s where I’m at. I’ve searched long and high for answers, but I can’t figure out how to capture low resolution video reliably using Android.
Any help very much appreciated !
Matthew
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avformat/evc_muxer : Added muxer to handle writing EVC encoded data into file or outpu...
15 juin 2023, par Dawid Kozinskiavformat/evc_muxer : Added muxer to handle writing EVC encoded data into file or output bytestream
Provided AVOutputFormat structure describing EVC output format (ff_evc_muxer)
Added documentation for EVC muxer
Signed-off-by : Dawid Kozinski <d.kozinski@samsung.com>