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Médias (91)
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Richard Stallman et le logiciel libre
19 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Mai 2013
Langue : français
Type : Texte
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Stereo master soundtrack
17 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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Elephants Dream - Cover of the soundtrack
17 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Image
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#7 Ambience
16 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Juin 2015
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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#6 Teaser Music
16 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Février 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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#5 End Title
16 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Février 2013
Langue : English
Type : Audio
Autres articles (41)
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Websites made with MediaSPIP
2 mai 2011, parThis page lists some websites based on MediaSPIP.
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Creating farms of unique websites
13 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP platforms can be installed as a farm, with a single "core" hosted on a dedicated server and used by multiple websites.
This allows (among other things) : implementation costs to be shared between several different projects / individuals rapid deployment of multiple unique sites creation of groups of like-minded sites, making it possible to browse media in a more controlled and selective environment than the major "open" (...) -
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 : (...)
Sur d’autres sites (7613)
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How to estimate bandwidth / speed requirements for real-time streaming video ?
19 juin 2016, par Vivek SethFor a project I’m working on, I’m trying to stream video to an iPhone through its headphone jack. My estimated bitrate is about 200kbps (If i’m wrong about this, please ignore that).
I’d like to squeeze as much performance out of this bitrate as possible and sound is not important for me, only video. My understanding is that to stream a a real-time video I will need to encode it with some codec on-the-fly and send compressed frames to the iPhone for it to decode and render. Based on my research, it seems that H.265 is one of the most space efficient codecs available so i’m considering using that.
Assuming my basic understanding of live streaming is correct, how would I estimate the FPS I could achieve for a given resolution using the H.265 codec ?
The best solution I can think of it to take a video file, encode it with H.265 and trim it to 1 minute of length to see how large the file is. The issue I see with this approach is that I think my calculations would include some overhead from the video container format (AVI, MKV, etc) and from the audio channels that I don’t care about.
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avutil/mathematics : speed up av_gcd by using Stein’s binary GCD algorithm
11 octobre 2015, par Ganesh Ajjanagaddeavutil/mathematics : speed up av_gcd by using Stein’s binary GCD algorithm
This uses Stein’s binary GCD algorithm :
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Binary_GCD_algorithm
to get a roughly 4x speedup over Euclidean GCD on standard architectures
with a compiler intrinsic for ctzll, and a roughly 2x speedup otherwise.
At the moment, the compiler intrinsic is used on GCC and Clang due to
its easy availability.Quick note regarding overflow : yes, subtractions on int64_t can, but the
llabs takes care of that. The llabs is also guaranteed to be safe, with
no annoying INT64_MIN business since INT64_MIN being a power of 2, is
shifted down before being sent to llabs.The binary GCD needs ff_ctzll, an extension of ff_ctz for long long (int64_t). On
GCC, this is provided by a built-in. On Microsoft, there is a
BitScanForward64 analog of BitScanForward that should work ; but I can’t confirm.
Apparently it is not available on 32 bit builds ; so this may or may not
work correctly. On Intel, per the documentation there is only an
intrinsic for _bit_scan_forward and people have posted on forums
regarding _bit_scan_forward64, but often their documentation is
woeful. Again, I don’t have it, so I can’t test.As such, to be safe, for now only the GCC/Clang intrinsic is added, the rest
use a compiled version based on the De-Bruijn method of Leiserson et al :
http://supertech.csail.mit.edu/papers/debruijn.pdf.Tested with FATE, sample benchmark (x86-64, GCC 5.2.0, Haswell)
with a START_TIMER and STOP_TIMER in libavutil/rationsl.c, followed by a
make fate.aac-am00_88.err :
builtin :
714 decicycles in av_gcd, 4095 runs, 1 skipsde-bruijn :
1440 decicycles in av_gcd, 4096 runs, 0 skipsprevious :
2889 decicycles in av_gcd, 4096 runs, 0 skipsSigned-off-by : Ganesh Ajjanagadde <gajjanagadde@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by : Michael Niedermayer <michael@niedermayer.cc> -
lavc/mjpegdec : speed up scan data copy
26 janvier 2016, par Matthieu Bouron