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Autres articles (36)

  • Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins

    27 avril 2010, par

    Mediaspip 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 2011

    Contrairement 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, par

    We 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)

  • Multimedia Exploration Journal : The Past Doesn’t Die

    12 juillet 2011, par Multimedia Mike — Game Hacking

    New haul of games, new (old) multimedia formats.

    Lords of Midnight
    Check out the box copy scan for Lords of Midnight in MobyGames. In particular, I’d like to call your attention to this little blurb :



    Ahem, "Journey through an immense world — the equivalent of 8 CD-ROMs." Yet, when I procured the game, it only came on a single CD-ROM. It’s definitely a CD-ROM (says so on the disc) and, coming from 1995, certainly predates the earliest DVD-ROMs (which can easily store 8 CD-ROMs on a disc). Thus, I wanted to jump in a see if they were using some phenomenal compression in order to squeeze so much info into 600 or so megabytes.

    I was surprised to see the contents of the disc clocking in at just under 40 megabytes. An intro movie and an outro movie account for 75% of that. Format ? None other than that curious ASCII anomaly, ARMovie/RPL with Escape 122 codec data.

    Cyclemania



    Cyclemania is one of those FMV backdrop action games, but with a motorcycle theme. I had a good feeling I would find some odd multimedia artifacts here and the game didn’t disappoint. The videos are apparently handled using 3-4 discrete files per animation. I’ve documented my cursory guesses and linked some samples at the new MultimediaWiki page.

    Interplay ACMP
    This is unrelated to this particular acquistion, but I was contacted today about audio files harvested from the 1993 DOS game Star Trek : Judgment Rites. The files begin with the ASCII signature "Interplay ACMP Data". This reminds me of Interplay MVE files which begin with the similar string "Interplay MVE File". My theory is that these files use the ACOMP compression format, though I’m still trying to make it fit.

    Wiki and samples are available as usual if you’d like to add your own research.

  • Convert mp3 to AAC with mpeg-2 container (FFMPEG)

    18 mars 2016, par jsurf

    I’m trying to convert an mp3 audio file to an AAC file with FFMPEG, and I need the audio to be wrapped in an MPEG-2 container.
    The resulting AAC file needs to be AAC-LC (Low Complexity), 1-channel, CBR mode, 44100 sample rate, and 48kb/s bitrate, so I use this command :

    ffmpeg -y -i input.mp3 -ar 44100 -ab 48k -acodec libfdk_aac -ac 1 output.aac

    But when I examine the ADTS headers, the audio file is always being wrapped in an MPEG-4 container. I have tried all the codecs listed here but I still end up with an mpeg-4 container wrapped around the audio : http://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/AACEncodingGuide.

    Here are the headers I get when examining the AAC output file :

    mpeg_type : ’MPEG4’,
    profile : 2,
    profile_name : ’AAC LC’,
    sample_freq : 44100,
    channel_config : 1,
    channels : 1,
    frame_length : 139,
    buffer_fullness : 157,
    number_of_frames : 1,
    frames_per_sec : 43.06640625

    Any ideas as to why ffmpeg wraps an mp4 container around the audio ? Can I get around this somehow ? Are there any other encoders I can try aside from FFMPEG ? I was giving FAAC encoder a shot and it gives me the proper encoding and ADTS headers, but alas it does not support mp3, only WAV.

  • Setting qscale programmatically when using MPEG4 encoder ( for constant quality / VBR)

    14 février 2019, par Dennis

    i implemented the possibility to encode various self-rendered video-frames with MPEG4 codec and create an .mp4 video file. This works fine. Now i want to add the possibility to define a quality slider (0-100%) to parameterize a factor for constant quality (VBR). I don’t know how to do that.

    I found out that -qscale seems to do what i want, so i looked in ffmpeg_opt.c what happens there and tried the same :

    config.codecContext->flags |= AV_CODEC_FLAG_QSCALE;
    config.codecContext->global_quality = FF_QP2LAMBDA * QualityLvl;

    with :

    • "config.codecContext" being the code context
    • "FF_QP2LAMBDA" being 118
    • "QualityLvl" is the "factor for constant quality" (has to be an int between 1 and 31 according to this :
      https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/Encode/MPEG-4)

    The problem is, that it actually doesn’t matter if "QualityLvl" is 1,2 or 30 it always results in the same file size and a visually same(?) video file. I would have expected file size and quality differences ?!