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Médias (29)

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Autres articles (37)

  • 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) (...)

  • List of compatible distributions

    26 avril 2011, par

    The table below is the list of Linux distributions compatible with the automated installation script of MediaSPIP. Distribution nameVersion nameVersion number Debian Squeeze 6.x.x Debian Weezy 7.x.x Debian Jessie 8.x.x Ubuntu The Precise Pangolin 12.04 LTS Ubuntu The Trusty Tahr 14.04
    If you want to help us improve this list, you can provide us access to a machine whose distribution is not mentioned above or send the necessary fixes to add (...)

  • Selection of projects using MediaSPIP

    2 mai 2011, par

    The examples below are representative elements of MediaSPIP specific uses for specific projects.
    MediaSPIP farm @ Infini
    The non profit organizationInfini develops hospitality activities, internet access point, training, realizing innovative projects in the field of information and communication technologies and Communication, and hosting of websites. It plays a unique and prominent role in the Brest (France) area, at the national level, among the half-dozen such association. Its members (...)

Sur d’autres sites (6327)

  • Optical Drive Value Proposition

    28 août 2010, par Multimedia Mike — General

    I have the absolute worst luck in the optical drive department. Ever since I started building my own computers in 1995 — close to the beginning of the CD-ROM epoch — I have burned through a staggering number of optical drives. Seriously, especially in the time period between about 1995-1998, I was going through a new drive every 4-6 months or so. This was also during that CD-ROM speed race where the the drive packages kept advertising loftier ‘X’ speed ratings. I didn’t play a lot of CD-ROM games during that timeframe, though I did listen to quite a few audio CDs through the computer.



    I use “optical drive” as a general term to describe CD-ROM drives, CD-R/RW drives, DVD-ROM drives, DVD-R/RW drives, and drives capable of doing any combination of reading and writing CDs and DVDs. In my observation, optical media seems to be falling out of favor somewhat, giving way to online digital distribution for things like games and software, as well as flash drives and external hard drives vs. recordable or rewritable media for backup and sneakernet duty. Somewhere along the line, I started to buy computers that didn’t even have optical drives. That’s why I have purchased at least 2 external USB drives (seen in the picture above). I don’t have much confidence that either works correctly. My main desktop until recently, a Mac Mini, has an internal optical drive that grew flaky and unreliable a few months after the unit was purchased.

    I just have really rotten luck with optical drives. The most reliable drive in my house is the one on the headless machine that, until recently, was the main workhorse on the FATE farm. The eject switch didn’t work correctly so I have to log in remotely, 'sudo eject', walk to the other room, pop in the disc, walk back to the other room, and work with the disc.

    Maybe optical media is on its way out, but I still have many hundreds of CD-ROMs. Perhaps I should move forward on this brainstorm to archive all of my optical discs on hard drives (and then think of some data mining experiments, just for the academic appeal), before it’s too late ; optical discs don’t last forever.

    So if I needed a good optical drive, what should I consider ? I’ve always been the type to go cheap, I admit. Many of my optical drives were on the lower end of the cost spectrum, which might have played some role in their rapid replacement. However, I’m not sold on the idea that I’m getting quality just because I’m paying a higher price. That LG unit at the top of the pile up there was relatively pricey and still didn’t fare well in the long (or even medium) term.

    Come to think of it, I used to have a ridiculous stockpile of castoff (but somehow still functional) optical drives. So many, in fact, that in 2004 I had a full size PC tower that I filled with 4 working drives, just because I could. Okay, I admit that there was a period where I had some reliable drives.

    That might be an idea, actually– throw together such a computer for heavy duty archival purposes. I visited Weird Stuff Warehouse today (needed some PC100 RAM for an old machine and they came through) and I think I could put together such a box rather cheaply.

    It’s a dirty job, but… well, you know the rest.

  • How to do multiple input with streamio-ffmpeg ?

    12 août 2020, par Yozuu

    I would like to recreate this ffmpeg line (which works well) in my rails app :

    


    ffmpeg -i 1.mp4 -i 2.mp4 -filter_complex '[0] [1] afir=dry=10:wet=10' output.wav


    


    So here is my config :

    


    module EncodingConstants
  PROCESSED_DEFAULTS = {
    resolution:           '500x400',
    video_codec:          'libx264',
    constant_rate_factor: '30',
    frame_rate:           '25',
    audio_codec:          'aac',
    audio_bitrate:        '128k',
    audio_sample_rate:    '48000',
    progress: :processing_progress
  }.freeze

  AUDIO_EFFECTS = {
    multi_effect: %w[-i /home/yozuu/2.mp4 -filter_complex [0] [1] afir=dry=10:wet=10]
 }.freeze


    


    So Sidekiq send this back to me :

    


    I, [2020-08-12T19:40:38.828081 #2142]  INFO -- : Running transcoding...
["/sbin/ffmpeg", "-y", "-i", "/home/yozuu/labo/video-project/tmp/1597254011-2142-0001-8820/1.mp4", "-vcodec", "libx264", "-acodec", "aac", "-s", "500x282", "-i", "/home/yozuu/2.mp4", "-filter_complex", "'[0]", "[1]", "afir=dry=10:wet=10'", "-r", "25", "-b:a", "128k", "-ar", "48000", "-aspect", "1.7730496453900708", "/home/yozuu/labo/video-project/tmp/1597254011-2142-0001-8820/1.mp4"]

E, [2020-08-12T19:40:38.897575 #2142] ERROR -- : Failed encoding...
["/sbin/ffmpeg", "-y", "-i", "/home/yozuu/labo/video-project/tmp/1597254011-2142-0001-8820/1.mp4", "-vcodec", "libx264", "-acodec", "aac", "-s", "500x282", "-i", "/home/yozuu/2.mp4", "-filter_complex", "'[0]", "[1]", "afir=dry=10:wet=10'", "-r", "25", "-b:a", "128k", "-ar", "48000", "-aspect", "1.7730496453900708", "/home/yozuu/labo/video-project/tmp/1597254011-2142-0001-8820/1.mp4"]


.....

Unknown decoder 'libx264'

Errors: no output file created. 



    


    I don't understand why because for me the command line ffmpeg seems correct.
Anyone have a idea ?
Thank you.

    


  • Can't list input devices ffmpeg linux

    23 juillet 2021, par spindi598

    On windows I could do something like this to list input devices :

    


    ffmpeg -list_devices true -f dshow -i dummy


    


    On Linux I try doing something like this :

    


    ffmpeg -list_devices true -f <x11grab></x11grab>avfoundation>&#xA;

    &#xA;

    And I get an error (I have also tried the latest git build from here) :

    &#xA;

    ffmpeg version n4.2.4 Copyright (c) 2000-2020 the FFmpeg developers&#xA;  built with gcc 10.1.0 (GCC)&#xA;  configuration: --prefix=/usr --disable-debug --disable-static --disable-stripping --enable-avisynth --enable-fontconfig --enable-gmp --enable-gnutls --enable-gpl --enable-ladspa --enable-libaom --enable-libass --enable-libbluray --enable-libdav1d --enable-libdrm --enable-libfreetype --enable-libfribidi --enable-libgsm --enable-libiec61883 --enable-libjack --enable-libmfx --enable-libmodplug --enable-libmp3lame --enable-libopencore_amrnb --enable-libopencore_amrwb --enable-libopenjpeg --enable-libopus --enable-libpulse --enable-libsoxr --enable-libspeex --enable-libsrt --enable-libssh --enable-libtheora --enable-libv4l2 --enable-libvidstab --enable-libvmaf --enable-libvorbis --enable-libvpx --enable-libwebp --enable-libx264 --enable-libx265 --enable-libxcb --enable-libxml2 --enable-libxvid --enable-nvdec --enable-nvenc --enable-omx --enable-shared --enable-version3&#xA;  libavutil      56. 31.100 / 56. 31.100&#xA;  libavcodec     58. 54.100 / 58. 54.100&#xA;  libavformat    58. 29.100 / 58. 29.100&#xA;  libavdevice    58.  8.100 / 58.  8.100&#xA;  libavfilter     7. 57.100 /  7. 57.100&#xA;  libswscale      5.  5.100 /  5.  5.100&#xA;  libswresample   3.  5.100 /  3.  5.100&#xA;  libpostproc    55.  5.100 / 55.  5.100&#xA;Unrecognized option &#x27;list_devices&#x27;.&#xA;Error splitting the argument list: Option not found&#xA;

    &#xA;

    How can I list my input devices ?

    &#xA;