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Médias (1)
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MediaSPIP Simple : futur thème graphique par défaut ?
26 septembre 2013, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2013
Langue : français
Type : Video
Autres articles (66)
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Other interesting software
13 avril 2011, parWe don’t claim to be the only ones doing what we do ... and especially not to assert claims to be the best either ... What we do, we just try to do it well and getting better ...
The following list represents softwares that tend to be more or less as MediaSPIP or that MediaSPIP tries more or less to do the same, whatever ...
We don’t know them, we didn’t try them, but you can take a peek.
Videopress
Website : http://videopress.com/
License : GNU/GPL v2
Source code : (...) -
D’autres logiciels intéressants
12 avril 2011, parOn ne revendique pas d’être les seuls à faire ce que l’on fait ... et on ne revendique surtout pas d’être les meilleurs non plus ... Ce que l’on fait, on essaie juste de le faire bien, et de mieux en mieux...
La liste suivante correspond à des logiciels qui tendent peu ou prou à faire comme MediaSPIP ou que MediaSPIP tente peu ou prou à faire pareil, peu importe ...
On ne les connais pas, on ne les a pas essayé, mais vous pouvez peut être y jeter un coup d’oeil.
Videopress
Site Internet : (...) -
Possibilité de déploiement en ferme
12 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP peut être installé comme une ferme, avec un seul "noyau" hébergé sur un serveur dédié et utilisé par une multitude de sites différents.
Cela permet, par exemple : de pouvoir partager les frais de mise en œuvre entre plusieurs projets / individus ; de pouvoir déployer rapidement une multitude de sites uniques ; d’éviter d’avoir à mettre l’ensemble des créations dans un fourre-tout numérique comme c’est le cas pour les grandes plate-formes tout public disséminées sur le (...)
Sur d’autres sites (7650)
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How to make timelapse with ffmpeg from files with date-time names ?
4 novembre 2019, par LA_I understand how to make timelapse video from the sequence of files.
But what if my files have names like YYYYMMDDHHmmSS.jpg ? How can I pass them in the correct order ? I would prefer not to rename them (there are 55’000 files, almost 10 Gb). -
Android : mp4 file plays when downloaded but when choosing "Video" player gets "Cannot play video"
11 juillet 2019, par gviewI’ve converted the video to an mp4 with ffmpeg using the h264 codec and AAC, and used the baseline profile.
Videos are 540x360x250kbps
I then ran qt-faststart on the file to move the atoms into the right order.
I’ve stuck the file up on a wiki we use and created a link to it.
My test phone is a Samsung Galaxy S3.
When I browse to the page that has links to the mp4’s on it, and I click on them, I get a popup window with 2 options : Internet and Video.
If I download the videos using the "Internet" option, I can play them on the phone without issue.
I’ve done other encodings with the main profile as well, and these also play fine. I thought that a powerful phone like the s3 would be able to handle the more advanced compression schemes available in h264, however I’ve also browsed the Android docs in regards to supported video formats, and it seems to state that only the "baseline" compression profile is supported.
Regardless, what doesn’t work is trying to use the "Video" option which I assume tries to stream the video.
For the wiki in question, clicking on the link reveals that the content-type and content-length headers are being set :
Content-Length 6175996
Content-Type video/mp4;charset=UTF-8Clicking on the link with a browser invokes a player (Quicktime in most cases) that can play the mp4’s.
Is there more to having the file HTTP streamable beyond making a link to it ? Why won’t my Android 4 play these files ?
UPDATE :
I decided to make a quick HTML5 page using the video tag, and the videos do play on both my Galaxy S3 and the latest IOS. -
Android : mp4 file plays when downloaded but when choosing "Video" player gets "Cannot play video"
14 janvier 2014, par gviewI've converted the video to an mp4 with ffmpeg using the h264 codec and AAC, and used the baseline profile.
Videos are 540x360x250kbps
I then ran qt-faststart on the file to move the atoms into the right order.
I've stuck the file up on a wiki we use and created a link to it.
My test phone is a Samsung Galaxy S3.
When I browse to the page that has links to the mp4's on it, and I click on them, I get a popup window with 2 options : Internet and Video.
If I download the videos using the "Internet" option, I can play them on the phone without issue.
I've done other encodings with the main profile as well, and these also play fine. I thought that a powerful phone like the s3 would be able to handle the more advanced compression schemes available in h264, however I've also browsed the Android docs in regards to supported video formats, and it seems to state that only the "baseline" compression profile is supported.
Regardless, what doesn't work is trying to use the "Video" option which I assume tries to stream the video.
For the wiki in question, clicking on the link reveals that the content-type and content-length headers are being set :
Content-Length 6175996
Content-Type video/mp4;charset=UTF-8Clicking on the link with a browser invokes a player (Quicktime in most cases) that can play the mp4's.
Is there more to having the file HTTP streamable beyond making a link to it ? Why won't my Android 4 play these files ?
UPDATE :
I decided to make a quick HTML5 page using the video tag, and the videos do play on both my Galaxy S3 and the latest IOS.