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  • Personnaliser en ajoutant son logo, sa bannière ou son image de fond

    5 septembre 2013, par

    Certains thèmes prennent en compte trois éléments de personnalisation : l’ajout d’un logo ; l’ajout d’une bannière l’ajout d’une image de fond ;

  • Ecrire une actualité

    21 juin 2013, par

    Présentez les changements dans votre MédiaSPIP ou les actualités de vos projets sur votre MédiaSPIP grâce à la rubrique actualités.
    Dans le thème par défaut spipeo de MédiaSPIP, les actualités sont affichées en bas de la page principale sous les éditoriaux.
    Vous pouvez personnaliser le formulaire de création d’une actualité.
    Formulaire de création d’une actualité Dans le cas d’un document de type actualité, les champs proposés par défaut sont : Date de publication ( personnaliser la date de publication ) (...)

  • Publier sur MédiaSpip

    13 juin 2013

    Puis-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

Sur d’autres sites (8857)

  • How Many Default Languages ?

    26 janvier 2012, par Multimedia Mike — Programming

    I was thinking back to my childhood, when my family first owned a computer. It was an MS-DOS-powered IBM PC. The default OS came with 2 programming environments, such as they were : GW-BASIC and batch files. It was a start, I suppose. I guess most any microcomputer you can name from that era came with some kind of BASIC interpreter. That defined the computer’s “out of the box” programmability.

    Then I started wondering how this compares to computers (operating systems/distributions, really) these days. So I installed a fresh version of the latest Ubuntu Linux version (11.10 as of this writing ; x86_32) and looked for programmability (without installing anything else). This is what I came up with :

    1. gcc/C (only the C compiler ; other components of the GNU compiler collection are installed separately)
    2. Perl
    3. Python
    4. C#, as furnished by Mono
    5. Bash — can’t forget about the shell as a full-featured programming language (sh is also present, but not t/csh)
    6. JavaScript — since Firefox is installed per default, JS counts
    7. GNU Assember — thanks to Reimar for the reminder that if gcc is present, gas necessarily needs to be there as well

    I checked on C++, Objective C, Java, Ada, Fortran, Go, Lua, Ruby, Tcl, PHP, R and other languages I could think of, but the above items were the only ones present by default. At the same time, I checked my Mac OS X (10.6) box and it also has Ruby and PHP installed. It has a bunch of other languages, courtesy of Xcode, so I can’t certify anything about its out of the box programmability.

    Still, I think “embarrassment of riches” pretty well sums it up. I try not to be crotchety old fogey complaining that kids these days don’t know how good they have it ; rather, I’m genuinely excited for anyone who wants to leap into computer programming in this day and age.

  • Http Live Streaming - Segmenting mp3 on Linux

    14 mai 2012, par krisbulman

    I simply want to segment an mp3 for HTTP Live Streaming in any linux distro (preferably CentOS) for the purpose of audio streaming to an iOS app.

    Out of the linux segmenters, I can get the following to compile in CentOS.

    1. http://wiki.andy-chu.com/doku.php?id=http_live_streaming (not sure last time this was updated)

    2. m3u8-segmenter on github (updated months ago)

    3. https://github.com/carsonmcdonald/HTTP-Live-Video-Stream-Segmenter-and-Distributor [ruby wrappers + c] (last updated 2 years ago, and a v2 branch 9 months old)

    In order to prep the file for segmenting, here is the ffmpeg conversion string to generate a valid ts file :

    $ ffmpeg -er 4 -i input.mp3 -f mpegts -acodec libmp3lame -ar 22050 -ab 32k -vn output.ts

    Each of the segmenters require various input switches, all quite simple, and all crash out with a seg fault. #2 actually does some segmenting, but faults after 56 segments every time. I've tried various mp3s with the same results. The issue queues for 2 & 3 are full, with no responses in months of the same issues.

    Others must be doing this in a live production environment that isn't running OSX.. what are your methods ?

  • How to decrease latency of images based live streaming ?

    18 octobre 2020, par Xiaofeng

    I need to encode and stream live images, but there is always about a 3s latency, how to decrease it ?

    


    The live stream is generated by the following command

    


    ffmpeg -analyzeduration 0 -probesize 32 -i h264_rtsp_url \
       -vf fps=1 -fflags nobuffer -fflags flush_packets -f mjpeg - \
    | ffmpeg -r 1 -f image2pipe -analyzeduration 0 -probesize 32 -i - \
             -c:v libx264 -pix_fmt yuv420p -tune zerolatency \
             -force_key_frames "expr:gte(t,n_forced*1)" \
             -flags low_delay -fflags nobuffer -fflags flush_packets \
             -profile:v main -preset medium -r 15 \
             -f rtp_mpegts rtp://127.0.0.1:4001


    


    Changing preset from medium to ultrafast does not affect the result, still 3s latency.

    


    And I am using mpv to play the streams,
The stream encoded by images :

    


    mpv --profile='low-latency' \
    --untimed --no-cache --no-demuxer-thread --vd-lavc-threads=1 \
    rtp://127.0.0.1:4001


    


    The origin stream :

    


    mpv --profile='low-latency' \
    --untimed --no-cache --no-demuxer-thread --vd-lavc-threads=1 \
    h264_rtsp_url


    


    [1] https://trac.ffmpeg.org/wiki/StreamingGuide