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Autres articles (47)
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La file d’attente de SPIPmotion
28 novembre 2010, parUne file d’attente stockée dans la base de donnée
Lors de son installation, SPIPmotion crée une nouvelle table dans la base de donnée intitulée spip_spipmotion_attentes.
Cette nouvelle table est constituée des champs suivants : id_spipmotion_attente, l’identifiant numérique unique de la tâche à traiter ; id_document, l’identifiant numérique du document original à encoder ; id_objet l’identifiant unique de l’objet auquel le document encodé devra être attaché automatiquement ; objet, le type d’objet auquel (...) -
Des sites réalisés avec MediaSPIP
2 mai 2011, parCette page présente quelques-uns des sites fonctionnant sous MediaSPIP.
Vous pouvez bien entendu ajouter le votre grâce au formulaire en bas de page. -
Support audio et vidéo HTML5
10 avril 2011MediaSPIP utilise les balises HTML5 video et audio pour la lecture de documents multimedia en profitant des dernières innovations du W3C supportées par les navigateurs modernes.
Pour les navigateurs plus anciens, le lecteur flash Flowplayer est utilisé.
Le lecteur HTML5 utilisé a été spécifiquement créé pour MediaSPIP : il est complètement modifiable graphiquement pour correspondre à un thème choisi.
Ces technologies permettent de distribuer vidéo et son à la fois sur des ordinateurs conventionnels (...)
Sur d’autres sites (3405)
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x264 library speed - Altivec vs SSE2 -
25 février 2013, par Omer MerdanI have simple cheap dualcore intel-3ghz-debian and access to super-expensive powerPc7-Aix.
And after few days of strugle, i compiled libx264 and tested it on both computers :
- GCC : library x264 on intel (with SSE2 capabilities) and
- GCC on 16 core powerPc (with altivec).
... and result is that cheap intel is x2 times faster ! (with altivec disabled, intel is 10x times faster)
My question : is this normal ?
Does all other powerPC-users have same results ? Can powerPc-altivec-optimisation of x264 library work at same speed with intel... or MMX/SSE optimisation is officially at least 2 times faster for this library ?I am not interested in multi-thread options. Number of cores and threads are irrelevant. Just simple one-thread x264 encoding with default "medium preset" using rawvideo as source, sse vs altivec.
Maybe native Aix XLC compiler provide better results ? (i managed only gcc to work)
... mac-powerpc-users maybe know something about this.
powrPc7-Aix:$ time (cat raw10sec.y4m |x264 --input-res 720x576 --fps 50 -o /dev/null -)
x264: 64-bit XCOFF
x264 [info]: using cpu capabilities: Altivec
time: real 0m33.559s
---
intelDebian:$ time (cat raw10sec.y4m |x264 --input-res 720x576 --fps 50 -o /dev/null -)
x264: ELF 32-bit LSB executable
x264 [info]: using cpu capabilities: MMX2 SSE2Fast SSSE3 FastShuffle SSE4.1 Cache64
time: real 0m16.503s -
x264 library speed - Altivec vs SSE4 -
15 août 2015, par Asain KujovicI have simple cheap dualcore intel-3ghz-debian and access to super-expensive powerPc7-Aix.
And after few days of strugle, i compiled libx264 and tested it on both computers :
- GCC : library x264 on intel (with SSE2 capabilities) and
- GCC on 16 core powerPc (with altivec).
... and result is that cheap intel is x2 times faster ! (with altivec disabled, intel is 10x times faster)
My question : is this normal ?
Does all other powerPC-users have same results ? Can powerPc-altivec-optimisation of x264 library work at same speed with intel... or MMX/SSE optimisation is officially at least 2 times faster for this library ?I am not interested in multi-thread options. Number of cores and threads are irrelevant. Just simple one-thread x264 encoding with default "medium preset" using rawvideo as source, sse vs altivec.
Maybe native Aix XLC compiler provide better results ? (i managed only gcc to work)
... mac-powerpc-users maybe know something about this.
powrPc7-Aix:$ time (cat raw10sec.y4m |x264 --input-res 720x576 --fps 50 -o /dev/null -)
x264: 64-bit XCOFF
x264 [info]: using cpu capabilities: Altivec
time: real 0m33.559s
---
intelDebian:$ time (cat raw10sec.y4m |x264 --input-res 720x576 --fps 50 -o /dev/null -)
x264: ELF 32-bit LSB executable
x264 [info]: using cpu capabilities: MMX2 SSE2Fast SSSE3 FastShuffle SSE4.1 Cache64
time: real 0m16.503s -
x264 library speed - Altivec vs SSE4 -
15 août 2015, par Asain KujovicI have simple cheap dualcore intel-3ghz-debian and access to super-expensive powerPc7-Aix.
And after few days of strugle, i compiled libx264 and tested it on both computers :
- GCC : library x264 on intel (with SSE2 capabilities) and
- GCC on 16 core powerPc (with altivec).
... and result is that cheap intel is x2 times faster ! (with altivec disabled, intel is 10x times faster)
My question : is this normal ?
Does all other powerPC-users have same results ? Can powerPc-altivec-optimisation of x264 library work at same speed with intel... or MMX/SSE optimisation is officially at least 2 times faster for this library ?I am not interested in multi-thread options. Number of cores and threads are irrelevant. Just simple one-thread x264 encoding with default "medium preset" using rawvideo as source, sse vs altivec.
Maybe native Aix XLC compiler provide better results ? (i managed only gcc to work)
... mac-powerpc-users maybe know something about this.
powrPc7-Aix:$ time (cat raw10sec.y4m |x264 --input-res 720x576 --fps 50 -o /dev/null -)
x264: 64-bit XCOFF
x264 [info]: using cpu capabilities: Altivec
time: real 0m33.559s
---
intelDebian:$ time (cat raw10sec.y4m |x264 --input-res 720x576 --fps 50 -o /dev/null -)
x264: ELF 32-bit LSB executable
x264 [info]: using cpu capabilities: MMX2 SSE2Fast SSSE3 FastShuffle SSE4.1 Cache64
time: real 0m16.503s