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Autres articles (53)
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Pas question de marché, de cloud etc...
10 avril 2011Le 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 (...) -
Des sites réalisés avec MediaSPIP
2 mai 2011, parCette page présente quelques-uns des sites fonctionnant sous MediaSPIP.
Vous pouvez bien entendu ajouter le votre grâce au formulaire en bas de page. -
Support audio et vidéo HTML5
10 avril 2011MediaSPIP utilise les balises HTML5 video et audio pour la lecture de documents multimedia en profitant des dernières innovations du W3C supportées par les navigateurs modernes.
Pour les navigateurs plus anciens, le lecteur flash Flowplayer est utilisé.
Le lecteur HTML5 utilisé a été spécifiquement créé pour MediaSPIP : il est complètement modifiable graphiquement pour correspondre à un thème choisi.
Ces technologies permettent de distribuer vidéo et son à la fois sur des ordinateurs conventionnels (...)
Sur d’autres sites (5600)
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avcodec : add common fflcms2 boilerplate
28 juin 2022, par Niklas Haasavcodec : add common fflcms2 boilerplate
Handling this in general code makes more sense than handling it in
individual codec files, because it would be a lot of unnecessary code
duplication for the plenty of formats that support exporting ICC
profiles (jpg, png, tiff, webp, jxl, ...).encode.c and decode.c will be in charge of initializing this state as
needed, so we merely need to make sure to uninit it afterwards from the
common destructor path.Signed-off-by : Niklas Haas <git@haasn.dev>
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ffmpeg - convert movie AND show original input (as a resized picture-in-picture, e.g., bottom-right corner) in the final output file
3 octobre 2019, par raventhis is my first post on this forum, so please be gentle in case I accidentally do trip over any forum rules that I would not know of yet :).
I would like to apply some color-grading to underwater GoPro footage. To quicker gauge the effect of my color settings (trial-and-error, as of yet), would like to see the original input video stream as a PIP (e.g., scaled down to 50% or even 30%), in the bottom-right corner of the converted output movie.
I have one input movie that is going to be color graded. The PIP should use the original as an input, just a scaled-down version of it.
I would like to use ffmpeg’s "-filter_complex" option to do the PIP, but all examples I can find on "-filter_complex" would use two already existing movies. Instead, I would like to make the color-corrected stream an on-the-fly input to "-filter_complex", which then renders the PIP.
Is that doable, all in one go ?
Both the individual snippets below work fine, I now would like to combine these and skip the creation of an intermediate color-graded TMP output which then gets combined, with the original, in a final PIP creation process.
Your help combining these two separate steps into one single "-filter_complex" action is greatly appreciated !Thanks in advance,
raven.[existing code snippets (M$ batch files)]
::declarations/defines::
set "INPUT="
set "TMP="
set "OUTPUT="
set "FFMPG="
set "QU=9" :: quality settings
set "CONV='"0 -1 0 -1 5 -1 0 -1 0:0 -1 0 -1 5 -1 0 -1 0:0 -1 0 -1 5 -1
0 -1 0:0 -1 0 -1 5 -1 0 -1 0'"" :: sharpening convolution filter
::color-grading part::
%FFMPG% -i %INPUT% -vf convolution=%CONV%,colorbalance=rs=%rs%:gs=%gs%:bs=%bs%:rm=%rm%:gm=%gm%:bm=%bm%:rh=%rh%:gh=%gh%:bh=%bh% -q:v %QU% -codec:v mpeg4 %TMP%
::PIP part::
%FFMPG% -i %TMP% -i %INPUT% -filter_complex "[1]scale=iw/3:ih/3
[pip]; [0][pip] overlay=main_w-overlay_w-10:main_h-overlay_h-10" -q:v
%QU% -codec:v mpeg4 %OUTPUT%
[/existing code] -
Can't split 24bit flac files on the command line [closed]
21 mars 2023, par MartinI am trying to export a 24bit flac file in my ubuntu terminal. I've tried two different methods, but neither work.


Method 1 : shntool


when I run this command :

shntool split -f times.cue -O always -o lowq_full_silence.flac


where lowq_full_silence.flac was rendered in audacity as a flac file with level=0 and bit depth=16 bit, my command works.


but if i run this command :


shntool split -f times.cue -O always -o full_hq.flac


where full_hq.flac has level=8 and bit depth=24 bit
The command fails :


shntool [split]: warning: unsupported format 0xfffe (Unknown) while processing file: [full_hq.flac]
shntool [split]: error: cannot continue due to error(s) shown above



https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/shntool/+bug/2000794


Method 2 : ffmpeg


Trying to split the flac file with comma separated 'split points' input


ffmpeg -i "full_hq.flac" -c copy -map 0 -f segment -segment_times "22,441,556,559" "%d_output.flac"


But the output from this ffmpeg command has broken length metadata :


https://trac.ffmpeg.org/ticket/4905


Is there a better way to split a high quality 24bit flac file into individual segments, where each exported segment file has correct length metadata ?


Files :
https://file.io/lvGTUEgQArb7