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Autres articles (112)
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Les vidéos
21 avril 2011, parComme 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 (...) -
MediaSPIP version 0.1 Beta
16 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP 0.1 beta est la première version de MediaSPIP décrétée comme "utilisable".
Le fichier zip ici présent contient uniquement les sources de MediaSPIP en version standalone.
Pour avoir une installation fonctionnelle, il est nécessaire d’installer manuellement l’ensemble des dépendances logicielles sur le serveur.
Si vous souhaitez utiliser cette archive pour une installation en mode ferme, il vous faudra également procéder à d’autres modifications (...) -
Encoding and processing into web-friendly formats
13 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP automatically converts uploaded files to internet-compatible formats.
Video files are encoded in MP4, Ogv and WebM (supported by HTML5) and MP4 (supported by Flash).
Audio files are encoded in MP3 and Ogg (supported by HTML5) and MP3 (supported by Flash).
Where possible, text is analyzed in order to retrieve the data needed for search engine detection, and then exported as a series of image files.
All uploaded files are stored online in their original format, so you can (...)
Sur d’autres sites (9695)
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Generate photo SlideShow in Java and Export as Video
21 avril 2015, par Abduliam RehmaniusI want to create a cross platform SlideShow maker desktop-application (mainly Windows & Mac), the SlideShow will be generated using a set of images with background music, subtitles/captions and there will be a transition between each slide/image.
I have done all the UI in swing and it all works superb on Windows & Mac. Now the only "little" problem is
How to generate a video from a set of images with "transitions" & "subtitles" in java using native java libs/frameworks and add some music in background ;-)
I want the video output format to be at least in avi & mov, with transitions like :
1) fade
2) Zoom (images will zoom-in from e.g. 64x64 to full video size)
3) Multiple (multiple images will appear in single slide)I have used JMF example to generate .mov from .jpeg images it was buggy but may work if I can add transitions ?? But it appears JMF is mainly for media playback it only supports a few media formats (for output).
I have also read a few docs of jffmpeg but it appears it too does not support transitions.
I have also tried FMJ but no use, now I am stuck and need assistance, on how this task can be done in java.I would be immensely thankful if anyone can guide me in right direction.
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many thanks -
Transcode HLS Segments individually using FFMPEG
27 mai 2013, par rayhI am recording a continuous, live stream to a high-bitrate HLS stream. I then want to asynchronously transcode this to different formats/bitrates. I have this working, mostly, except audio artefacts are appearing between each segment (gaps and pops).
Here is an example ffmpeg command line :
ffmpeg -threads 1 -nostdin -loglevel verbose \
-nostdin -y -i input.ts -c:a libfdk_aac \
-ac 2 -b:a 64k -y -metadata -vn output.tsInspecting an example sound file shows that there is a gap at the end of the audio :
And the start of the file looks suspiciously attenuated (although this may not be an issue) :
My suspicion is that these artefacts are happening because transcoding are occurring without the context of the stream as a whole.
Any ideas on how to convince FFMPEG to produce audio that will fit back into a HLS stream ?
** UPDATE 1 **
Here are the start/end of the original segment. As you can see, the start still appears the same, but the end is cleanly ended at 30s. I expect some degree of padding with lossy encoding, but I there is some way that HLS manages to do gapless playback (is this related to iTunes method with custom metadata ?)
** UPDATED 2 **
So, I converted both the original (128k aac in MPEG2 TS) and the transcoded (64k aac in aac/adts container) to WAV and put the two side-by-side. This is the result :
I'm not sure if this is representative of how a client will play it back, but it seems a bit odd that decoding the transcoded one introduces a gap at the start and makes the segment longer. Given they are both lossy encoding, I would have expected padding to be equally present in both (if at all).
** UPDATE 3 **
According to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gapless_playback - Only a handful of encoders support gapless - for MP3, I've switched to lame in ffmpeg, and the problem, so far, appears to have gone.
For AAC (see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FAAC), I have tried libfaac (as opposed to libfdk_aac) and it also seems to produce gapless audio. However, the quality of the latter isn't that great and I'd rather use libfdk_aac is possible.
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Python : Passing complex (ffmpeg) arguments to Popen
25 juin 2016, par xaccrocheurThis ffmpeg Popen invocation works :
command = ['ffmpeg', '-y',
'-i', filename,
'-filter_complex', 'showwavespic',
'-colorkey', 'red',
'-frames:v', '1',
'-s', '800:30',
'-vsync', '2',
'/tmp/waveform.png']
process = sp.Popen( command, stdin=sp.PIPE, stderr=sp.PIPE)
process.wait()But I need to use ’compand, showwavespic’ and this comma seems to be blocking the execution. I also need to pass all sorts of strange characters, like columns and, well, all that you can find in a CLI invocation.
How can I pass complex arguments ?