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  • Pas question de marché, de cloud etc...

    10 avril 2011

    Le vocabulaire utilisé sur ce site essaie d’éviter toute référence à la mode qui fleurit allègrement
    sur le web 2.0 et dans les entreprises qui en vivent.
    Vous êtes donc invité à bannir l’utilisation des termes "Brand", "Cloud", "Marché" etc...
    Notre motivation est avant tout de créer un outil simple, accessible à pour tout le monde, favorisant
    le partage de créations sur Internet et permettant aux auteurs de garder une autonomie optimale.
    Aucun "contrat Gold ou Premium" n’est donc prévu, aucun (...)

  • Le plugin : Podcasts.

    14 juillet 2010, par

    Le problème du podcasting est à nouveau un problème révélateur de la normalisation des transports de données sur Internet.
    Deux formats intéressants existent : Celui développé par Apple, très axé sur l’utilisation d’iTunes dont la SPEC est ici ; Le format "Media RSS Module" qui est plus "libre" notamment soutenu par Yahoo et le logiciel Miro ;
    Types de fichiers supportés dans les flux
    Le format d’Apple n’autorise que les formats suivants dans ses flux : .mp3 audio/mpeg .m4a audio/x-m4a .mp4 (...)

  • Ajouter notes et légendes aux images

    7 février 2011, par

    Pour pouvoir ajouter notes et légendes aux images, la première étape est d’installer le plugin "Légendes".
    Une fois le plugin activé, vous pouvez le configurer dans l’espace de configuration afin de modifier les droits de création / modification et de suppression des notes. Par défaut seuls les administrateurs du site peuvent ajouter des notes aux images.
    Modification lors de l’ajout d’un média
    Lors de l’ajout d’un média de type "image" un nouveau bouton apparait au dessus de la prévisualisation (...)

Sur d’autres sites (3656)

  • Powerful Video Analytics and Audio Analytics for Piwik

    10 novembre 2016, par InnoCraft — Plugins, Press Releases

    Over the years, one of the most frequently requested feature by users was to be able to measure how videos and audios are watched and engaged with on your website. We are finally able to announce that it is here ! We are very excited to launch Media Analytics, which will help you understand and grow your audience.

    This article is a showcase of the new powerful video and audio analytics product built for Piwik.

    Why media analytics ?

    We all love media content such as videos as they can make our experiences on websites and apps so much more interesting. A growing number of websites now utilize media files in one form or another : a video presentation of a product or service, a video tutorial teaching you how to do something or interviews with key speakers. Also many creators and distributors are publishing audio files such as podcasts or music songs, and even broadcasting live video events such as music concerts or an entire conference online.

    Whenever you publish videos or audio media on your websites or applications, Media Analytics provides you with clear insights on how your audience interacts with your content. It helps you see what content works and why – so you can better understand and further grow your business !

    Valuable insights in Real time

    See where your audience comes from.

    How will Media Analytics help me grow ?

    • Better understand your audience : who are the users playing videos and for how long, how often, and where have they dropped off.
    • Gain quick insights into how interaction with your media changes over time with easy to use graphs and report overviews.
    • Get closer to your users by seeing every action of your visitors before and after they utilized your media.
    • View valuable insights in Real time : ‘most popular content right now’, your real time audience map, and more.
    • See where your audience comes from. Drill down right from continents to specifics such as cities.
    • Share and export media analytics reports with your colleagues by creating custom email reports.
    • Video and audio players are supported either automatically (for Youtube, Vimeo, HTML5…) or via a simple custom player integration.
    • No data limit and 100% privacy and data ownership.

    Best of all, it is easy to use and understand, and integrates perfectly with Piwik. Media Analytics complements other reports to give you a 360 degree view of how your users engage with your content.

    Learn more on the official website : www.media-analytics.net

    How do I get Media Analytics ?

    All premium plugins come with our 14 day money back guarantee and 1-click installation & updates. Customers get all product updates for free.

    Media Analytics is available for purchase and download on the Marketplace.

    If you are not using Piwik yet, you can also signup for a free trial of Piwik Cloud (including Media Analytics !).

    Have a question about this product ? Get in touch.

  • Video recorded using Kurento is corrupted

    10 avril 2023, par Pranjal Lamba

    We are using Kurento media server v6.6.1 to record a video conference. The web app client which runs on Chrome(Windows, OSX, Android) is using a modified version of one-to-one-call-advanced Kurento sample and the second client is an Android native application which is using Nubomedia webrtcpeer v1.1.1. Nubomedia webrtcpeer uses LibJingle built by io.pristine v11139(released on December 2015). The video and audio is recorded in two separate recorder endpoints by Kurento.

    


    Video conference recordings generated using web app client/s are working properly. But sometimes the video generated using native application contains all the frames within initial few seconds. Please find below download link for the problematic video generated by our Android native application,

    


    https://drive.google.com/file/d/1vOVk8hPuP_iOlQfsmMoqZLhICy-Jpcee/view?usp=sharing

    


    We are testing this feature on a range of Android devices, Nexus 5(Android 6.0.1), Nexus 6(Android 7.1.1), Sony Xperia Z Tablet(Android 6.0.1), Samsung Galaxy Tab A(Android 5.0), OnePlus 3(Android 7.1.1), Xiaomi A1(Android 7.1.1). The issue randomly starts occurring on a bunch of these devices while the others work properly and vice-versa.

    


    We are recording the videos with the following constraints,

    


    Web app client

    


    Minimum video width : 32
    
Minimum video height : 32
    
Maximum video width : 320
    
Maximum video height : 320
    
Minimum framerate : 1
    
Maximum framerate : 15
    
Video container format : MP4
    
Video codec : H.264
    
Audio codec : AAC

    


    Android native client

    


    Minimum video width : 32
    
Minimum video height : 32
    
Maximum video width : 480
    
Maximum video height : 640
    
Minimum framerate : 1
    
Maximum framerate : 25
    
Video container format : MP4
    
Video codec : H.264
    
Audio codec : Opus

    


  • AppRTC : Google’s WebRTC test app and its parameters

    23 juillet 2014, par silvia

    If you’ve been interested in WebRTC and haven’t lived under a rock, you will know about Google’s open source testing application for WebRTC : AppRTC.

    When you go to the site, a new video conferencing room is automatically created for you and you can share the provided URL with somebody else and thus connect (make sure you’re using Google Chrome, Opera or Mozilla Firefox).

    We’ve been using this application forever to check whether any issues with our own WebRTC applications are due to network connectivity issues, firewall issues, or browser bugs, in which case AppRTC breaks down, too. Otherwise we’re pretty sure to have to dig deeper into our own code.

    Now, AppRTC creates a pretty poor quality video conference, because the browsers use a 640×480 resolution by default. However, there are many query parameters that can be added to the AppRTC URL through which the connection can be manipulated.

    Here are my favourite parameters :

    • hd=true : turns on high definition, ie. minWidth=1280,minHeight=720
    • stereo=true : turns on stereo audio
    • debug=loopback : connect to yourself (great to check your own firewalls)
    • tt=60 : by default, the channel is closed after 30min – this gives you 60 (max 1440)

    For example, here’s how a stereo, HD loopback test would look like : https://apprtc.appspot.com/?r=82313387&hd=true&stereo=true&debug=loopback .

    This is not the limit of the available parameter, though. Here are some others that you may find interesting for some more in-depth geekery :

    • ss=[stunserver] : in case you want to test a different STUN server to the default Google ones
    • ts=[turnserver] : in case you want to test a different TURN server to the default Google ones
    • tp=[password] : password for the TURN server
    • audio=true&video=false : audio-only call
    • audio=false : video-only call
    • audio=googEchoCancellation=false,googAutoGainControl=true : disable echo cancellation and enable gain control
    • audio=googNoiseReduction=true : enable noise reduction (more Google-specific parameters)
    • asc=ISAC/16000 : preferred audio send codec is ISAC at 16kHz (use on Android)
    • arc=opus/48000 : preferred audio receive codec is opus at 48kHz
    • dtls=false : disable datagram transport layer security
    • dscp=true : enable DSCP
    • ipv6=true : enable IPv6

    AppRTC’s source code is available here. And here is the file with the parameters (in case you want to check if they have changed).

    Have fun playing with the main and always up-to-date WebRTC application : AppRTC.

    UPDATE 12 May 2014

    AppRTC now also supports the following bitrate controls :

    • arbr=[bitrate] : set audio receive bitrate
    • asbr=[bitrate] : set audio send bitrate
    • vsbr=[bitrate] : set video receive bitrate
    • vrbr=[bitrate] : set video send bitrate

    Example usage : https://apprtc.appspot.com/?r=&asbr=128&vsbr=4096&hd=true

    The post AppRTC : Google’s WebRTC test app and its parameters first appeared on ginger’s thoughts.