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  • Supporting all media types

    13 avril 2011, par

    Unlike most software and media-sharing platforms, MediaSPIP aims to manage as many different media types as possible. The following are just a few examples from an ever-expanding list of supported formats : images : png, gif, jpg, bmp and more audio : MP3, Ogg, Wav and more video : AVI, MP4, OGV, mpg, mov, wmv and more text, code and other data : OpenOffice, Microsoft Office (Word, PowerPoint, Excel), web (html, CSS), LaTeX, Google Earth and (...)

  • 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) (...)

  • Les vidéos

    21 avril 2011, par

    Comme les documents de type "audio", Mediaspip affiche dans la mesure du possible les vidéos grâce à la balise html5 .
    Un des inconvénients de cette balise est qu’elle n’est pas reconnue correctement par certains navigateurs (Internet Explorer pour ne pas le nommer) et que chaque navigateur ne gère en natif que certains formats de vidéos.
    Son avantage principal quant à lui est de bénéficier de la prise en charge native de vidéos dans les navigateur et donc de se passer de l’utilisation de Flash et (...)

Sur d’autres sites (4103)

  • Merge remote-tracking branch ’qatar/master’

    5 janvier 2014, par Michael Niedermayer
    Merge remote-tracking branch ’qatar/master’
    

    * qatar/master :
    cmdutils : update copyright year to 2014.

    Conflicts :
    cmdutils.c

    See : 0b1cfc4f28d81a8a49fdd5589b2eed06477abd61
    Merged-by : Michael Niedermayer <michaelni@gmx.at>

  • Copy 3gp moov atom from one file to another

    1er août 2016, par message

    I was in Norway and I had an awesome time ; I recorded my ride on the sledges, and my HTC Sensation turned off when I finished my ride because my battery ran out.

    When I reached my laptop I found a 630 Mb video file my the phone, but I was not able to play it with VLC. Since I’m using Ubuntu, I tried to ffprobe my file and I received the following :

    [22:22 @ ~/Desktop] $ ffprobe VIDEO0002.3gp
    FFprobe version 0.6-4:0.6-2ubuntu6.3, Copyright (c) 2007-2010 the FFmpeg developers
     built on Dec 21 2011 18:43:14 with gcc 4.4.5
     configuration: --extra-version=4:0.6-2ubuntu6.3 --prefix=/usr --enable-avfilter --enable-avfilter-lavf --enable-vdpau --enable-bzlib --enable-libgsm --enable-libschroedinger --enable-libspeex --enable-libtheora --enable-libvorbis --enable-vaapi --enable-pthreads --enable-zlib --enable-libvpx --disable-stripping --enable-runtime-cpudetect --enable-gpl --enable-postproc --enable-x11grab --enable-libdc1394 --shlibdir=/usr/lib/i686/cmov --cpu=i686 --enable-shared --disable-static --disable-ffmpeg --disable-ffplay
     libavutil     50.15. 1 / 50.15. 1
     libavcodec    52.72. 2 / 52.72. 2
     libavformat   52.64. 2 / 52.64. 2
     libavdevice   52. 2. 0 / 52. 2. 0
     libavfilter    1.19. 0 /  1.19. 0
     libswscale     0.11. 0 /  0.11. 0
     libpostproc   51. 2. 0 / 51. 2. 0
    [mov,mp4,m4a,3gp,3g2,mj2 @ 0x8c3c010]moov atom not found
    VIDEO0002.3gp: Operation not permitted

    I had an idea that I might be able to use an older recorded video from my phone and simply copy the moov atom from that working file to the broken one. Any ideas about that ? How can I fix this problem ?

  • The New Samples Regime

    1er décembre 2011, par Multimedia Mike — General

    A little while ago, I got a big head over the fact that I owned and controlled the feared and revered MPlayer samples archive. This is the repository that retains more than a decade of multimedia samples.

    Conflict
    Where once there was one multimedia project (FFmpeg), there are now 2 (also Libav). There were various political and technical snafus regarding the previous infrastructure. I volunteered to take over hosting the vast samples archive (53 GB at the time) at samples.mplayerhq.hu (s.mphq for this post).

    However, a brand new server is online at samples.libav.org (s.libav for this post).

    Policies
    The server at s.libav will be the authoritative samples repository going forward. Why does s.libav receive the honor ? Mostly by virtue of having more advanced features. My simple (yet bandwidth-rich) web hosting plan does not provide for rsync or anonymous FTP services, both of which have traditionally been essential for the samples server. In the course of hosting s.mphq for the past few months, a few more discrepancies have come to light– apparently, the symlinks weren’t properly replicated. And perhaps most unusual is that if a directory contains a README file, it won’t be displayed in the directory listing (which frustrated me greatly when I couldn’t find this README file that I carefully and lovingly crafted years ago).

    The s.mphq archive will continue to exist — nay, must exist — going forward since there are years’ worth of web links pointing into it. I’ll likely set up a mirroring script that periodically (daily) rsyncs from s.libav to my local machine and then uses lftp (the best facility I have available) to mirror the files up to s.mphq.

    Also, since we’re starting fresh with a new upload directory, I think we need to be far more ruthless about policing its content. This means making sure that anything that is uploaded has an accompanying file which explains why it’s there and ideally links the sample to a bug report somewhere. No explanation = sample terminated.

    RSS
    I think it would be nifty to have an RSS feed that shows the latest samples to appear in the repository. I figure that I can use the Unix ‘find’ command on my local repository in concert with something like PyRSS2Gen to accomplish this goal.

    Monetization
    In the few months that I have been managing the repository, I have had numerous requests for permission to leech the entire collection in one recursive web-suck. These requests often from commercial organizations who wish to test their multimedia product on a large corpus of diverse samples. Personally, I believe the archive makes a rather poor corpus for such an endeavor, but so be it. Go ahead ; hosting this archive barely makes a dent in my fairly low-end web hosting plan. However, at least one person indicated that it might be easier to mail a hard drive to me, have me copy it, and send it back.

    This got me thinking about monetization opportunities. Perhaps, I should provide a service to send HDs filled with samples for the cost of the HD, shipping, and a small donation to the multimedia projects. I immediately realized that that is precisely the point at which the vast multimedia samples archive — with all of its media of questionable fair use status — would officially run afoul of copyright laws.

    Which brings me to…

    Clean Up
    I think we need to clean up some samples, starting with the ones that were marked not-readable in the old repository. Apparently, some ‘samples’ were, e.g., full anime videos and were responsible for a large bandwidth burden when linked from various sources.

    We multimedia nerds are a hoarding lot, never willing to throw anything away. This will probably the most challenging proposal to implement.