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Médias (1)
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1 000 000 (wav version)
26 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
Autres articles (42)
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Publier sur MédiaSpip
13 juin 2013Puis-je poster des contenus à partir d’une tablette Ipad ?
Oui, si votre Médiaspip installé est à la version 0.2 ou supérieure. Contacter au besoin l’administrateur de votre MédiaSpip pour le savoir -
Configuration spécifique d’Apache
4 février 2011, parModules spécifiques
Pour la configuration d’Apache, il est conseillé d’activer certains modules non spécifiques à MediaSPIP, mais permettant d’améliorer les performances : mod_deflate et mod_headers pour compresser automatiquement via Apache les pages. Cf ce tutoriel ; mode_expires pour gérer correctement l’expiration des hits. Cf ce tutoriel ;
Il est également conseillé d’ajouter la prise en charge par apache du mime-type pour les fichiers WebM comme indiqué dans ce tutoriel.
Création d’un (...) -
Contribute to a better visual interface
13 avril 2011MediaSPIP is based on a system of themes and templates. Templates define the placement of information on the page, and can be adapted to a wide range of uses. Themes define the overall graphic appearance of the site.
Anyone can submit a new graphic theme or template and make it available to the MediaSPIP community.
Sur d’autres sites (5806)
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ffmpeg zoompan + crop
24 février 2021, par andykaisI need to pan across a video that is also being cropped by ffmpeg. How can I accomplish this in a single ffmpeg command ?


So far I see two possible options :


Option #1 : use crop variables pan across the video. This is choppy, but possibly fixed by upscaling the input.


ffmpeg -i input.mp4 -vf 'crop=w=in_w/2:h=in_h:x=t*10' crop_panned_output.mp4



Option #2 : create an alpha mask in the shape of the crop, and then apply it on top of the input video with a zoompan filter. ffmpeg is doing extra work in this case, because we have to pad the input, then zoom in on it, then pan across it, then apply the alpha mask. This is actually using the "zoompan" feature to "pan" though.


magick -size 1920x1080 xc:none -fill black -draw "rectangle 480,0 1440,1080" rectangular-alpha-mask.png
ffmpeg -i input.mp4 -i rectangular-alpha-mask.png -filter_complex "
 [0:v]pad=2112:1188,zoompan=z=1.1:px+0.5:d=1:fps=60:s=1920x1080[input_pan];
 [1:v]alphaextract[alf];
 [input_pan][alf]alphamerge[masked];
 color=s=1920x1080:color=red[base];
 [base][masked]overlay=shortest=1
" mask_panned_output.mp4



Are either of these the right way to do it or are they incredibly inefficient ? Is there another option ? Cropping & panning together feels like a fairly common workflow, but these solutions feel a bit hacky.


Here is a visual description of what panning and cropping a video looks like :


First start with a video. Here is a simple one.



I want to crop the video to a certain width/height, and move from the left to the right across the video. The background is colored red for clarity



The video moves from left to right across the original video, and keeps the same crop ratio.



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Extract alpha from video ffmpeg android
24 juin 2018, par Yarik DenisykI want to overlay transparent video on the background image. I have a video where the top half is RGB object and bottom half is an alpha mask.
Now, for making this I do next steps :
1) I am extracting all frames from video and save to the folder
2) Each frame splitting to top and bottom half bitmap
3) Top bitmap composite with bottom mask for extract alpha and get a frame with transparent background
3) I am drawing each frame on the background and save to a folder
4) Create a video using FFmpeg
The problem is step 2, 3 and 4, they very slow. Maybe has another way to overlay transparent video on the background image ?
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Can FFMPEG output like if it was a WDM / directshow webcam ?
22 septembre 2015, par JeffcuriousI am using a 3D scanning program that uses a Directshow input from a camera / webcam.
To increase the quality of the scan, I purchased a Blackmagic HDMI acquisition card that appears as a "webcam" in Windows. I am capturing the live HDMI output from a Canon DSLR (60D) into the Blackmagic card and then into the scanning program. But the output of the live Canon HDMI is interlaced (1080i). This is causing problems during the scan process.
I would like to deinterlace the signal coming from the Blackmagic with FFmpeg and then output it "as if it was a windows WDM/directshow".
Can FFMPEG output a stream that appears to other application as if it was a regular webcam ?
Thanks,
Jeff