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Autres articles (106)
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Publier sur MédiaSpip
13 juin 2013Puis-je poster des contenus à partir d’une tablette Ipad ?
Oui, si votre Médiaspip installé est à la version 0.2 ou supérieure. Contacter au besoin l’administrateur de votre MédiaSpip pour le savoir -
MediaSPIP Player : problèmes potentiels
22 février 2011, parLe lecteur ne fonctionne pas sur Internet Explorer
Sur Internet Explorer (8 et 7 au moins), le plugin utilise le lecteur Flash flowplayer pour lire vidéos et son. Si le lecteur ne semble pas fonctionner, cela peut venir de la configuration du mod_deflate d’Apache.
Si dans la configuration de ce module Apache vous avez une ligne qui ressemble à la suivante, essayez de la supprimer ou de la commenter pour voir si le lecteur fonctionne correctement : /** * GeSHi (C) 2004 - 2007 Nigel McNie, (...) -
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 (...)
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WebVTT Discussions at FOMS
18 décembre 2013, par silviaAt the recent FOMS (Foundations of Open Media Software and Standards) Developer Workshop, we had a massive focus on WebVTT and the state of its feature set. You will find links to summaries of the individual discussions in the FOMS Schedule page. Here are some of the key results I went away with.
1. WebVTT Regions
The key driving force for improvements to WebVTT continues to be the accurate representation of CEA608/708 captioning. As part of that drive, we’ve introduced regions (the CEA708 “window” concept) to WebVTT. WebVTT regions satisfy multiple requirements of CEA608/708 captions :
- support for rollup captions
- support for background color and border color on a group of cues independent of the background color of the individual cue
- possibility to move a group of cues from one location on screen to a different
- support to specify an anchor point and a growth direction for cues when their text size changes
- support for specifying a fixed number of lines to be rendered
- possibility to specify which region is rendered in front of which other one when regions overlap
While WebVTT regions enable us to satisfy all of the above points, the specification isn’t actually complete yet and some of the above needs aren’t satisfied yet.
We have an open bug to move a region elsewhere. A first discussion at FOMS seemed to to indicate that we’ll have to add syntax for updating a region at a particular time and thus give region definitions a way to be valid only for a certain time frame. I can imagine that the region definitions that we have in the header of the WebVTT file now would have an implicitly defined time frame from the start to the end of the file, but can be overruled by a re-definition anywhere within the WebVTT file. That redefinition needs to provide a start and end time.
We registered a bug to add specifying the width and height of regions (and possibly of cues) by em (i.e. by multiples of the largest character in a font). This should allow us to have the region grow/shrink around the region anchor point with a change of font size by script or a user. em specifications should also be applied to cues – that matches the column count of CEA708/608 better.
When regions overlap, the original region extension spec already suggested a “layer” cue setting. It will be easy to add it.
Another change that we will ultimately need is the “scroll” setting : we will need to introduce support for scrolling text down or from left-to-right or right-to-left, e.g. vertical scrolling text seems to be used in some Chinese caption use cases.
2. Unify Rendering Approach
The introduction of regions created a second code path in the rendering spec with some duplication. At FOMS we discussed if it was possible to unify that. The suggestion is to render all cues into a region. Those that are not part of a region would be rendered into an anonymous region that covers the complete viewport. There may be some consequences to this, e.g. cue settings should be usable across all cues, no matter whether or not part of a region, and avoiding cue overlap may need to be done within regions.
Here’s a rough outline of the path of the new rendering algorithm :
(1) Render the regions :
Specified Region Anonymous Region Render values as given : Render following values : - width
- lines
- regionanchor
- viewportanchor
- scroll
- 100%
- videoheight/lineheight
- 0,0
- 0,0
- none
(2) Render the cues :
- Create a cue box and put it in its region (anonymous if none given).
- Calculate position & size of cue box from cue settings (position, line, size).
- Calculate position of cue text inside cue box from remaining cue settings (vertical, align).
3. Vertical Features
WebVTT includes vertical rendering, both right-to-left and left-to-right. However, regions are not defined for vertical. Eventually, we’re going to have to look at the vertical features of WebVTT with more details and figure out whether the spec is working for them and what real-world requirements we have missed. We hope we can get some help from users in countries where vertically rendered captions/subtitles are the norm.
4. Best Practices
Some of he WebVTT users at FOMS suggested it would be advantageous to start a list of “best practices” for how to author captions with WebVTT. Example recommendations are :
- Use line numbers only to position cues from top or bottom of viewport. Don’t use otherwise.
- Note that when the user increases the fontsize in rollup captions and thus introduces new line breaks, your cues will roll by faster because the number of lines of a rollup is fixed.
- Make sure to use &lrm ; and &rlm ; UTF-8 markers to control the directionality of your text.
It would be nice if somebody started such a document.
5. Non-caption use cases
Instead of continuing to look back and improve our support of captions/subtitles in WebVTT, one session at FOMS also went ahead and looked forward to other use cases. The following requirements came out of this :
5.1 Preview Thumbnails
A common use case for timed data is the use of preview thumbnails on the navigation bar of videos. A native implementation of preview thumbnails would allow crawlers and search engines to have a standardised way of extracting timed images for media files, so introduction of a new @kind value “thumbnails” was suggested.
The content of a “thumbnails” cue could be any of :
- an image URL
- a sprite URL to a single image
- a spatial & temporal media fragment URL to a media resource
- base64 encoded image (data URI)
- an iframe offset to the media resource
The suggestion is to allow anything that would work in a img @src attribute as value in a cue of @kind=”thumbnails”. Responsive images might also be useful for a track of @kind=”thumbnails”. It may even be possible to define an inband thumbnail track based on the track of @kind=”thumbnails”. Such cues should also work in the JavaScript track API.
5.2 Chapter markers
There is interest to put richer content than just a chapter title into chapter cues. Often, chapters consist of a title, text and and image. The text is not so important, but the image is used almost everywhere that chapters are used. There may be a need to extend chapter cue content with images, similar to what a @kind=”thumbnails” track offers.
The conclusion that we arrived at was that we need to make @kind=”thumbnails” work first and then look at using the learnings from that to extend @kind=”chapters”.
5.3 Inband tracks for live video
A difficult topic was opened with the question of how to transport text tracks in live video. In live captioning, end times are never created for cues, but are implied by the start time of the next cue. This is a use case that hasn’t been addressed in HTML5/WebVTT yet. An old proposal to allow a special end time value of “NEXT” was discussed and recommended for adoption. Also, there was support for the spec change that stops blocking loading VTT until all cues have been loaded.
5.4 Cross-domain VTT loading
A brief discussion centered around the fact that the spec disallows cross-domain loading of WebVTT files, but that no browser implements this. This needs to be discussion at the HTML WG level.
6. Regions in live captioning
The final topic that we discussed was how we could provide support for regions in live captioning.
- The currently active region definitions will need to be come part of every header of every VTT file segment that HLS uses, so it’s available in case the cues in the segment file reference it.
- “NEXT” in end time markers would make authoring of live captioned VTT files easier.
- If the application wants to use 1 word at a time and doesn’t want to delay sending the word until the full cue is authored (e.g. in a Hangout type environment), we will need to introduce the concept of “cue continuation markers”, so we know that a cue could be extended with the next VTT file fragment.
This is an extensive and impressive amount of discussion around WebVTT and a lot of new work to be performed in the future. I’m very grateful for all the people who have contributed to these discussions at FOMS and will hopefully continue to help get the specifications right.
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ffmpeg-how to add text to video without encoding [on hold]
27 décembre 2013, par user3139491I want to add text to video without encoding.how to do this.
I create this codeffmpeg -i file.mov -vf drawtext="fontfile=/usr/share/fonts/truetype/ttf-dejavu/DejaVuSerif.ttf:text='Text to write':fontsize=20:fontcolor=black:x=100:y=100" final.mov
this code word well but the cpu hit the peak.
so only want to do this without encoding.
is -vcodec copy map can be used ???? -
Size Discrepany in the ‘du’ Command
22 juin 2012, par Multimedia Mike — GeneralI had a problem today while using the common Unix command ’du’. As a refresher, ’du’ stands for disk usage and is a handy tool for understanding how much disk space is being occupied.
I think ’du’ is probably doing the right thing. The problem might be that I’m getting strange (read : 1/2 the expected number) when running the tool against directories on vmhgfs, the VMware filesystem.
Science Project
On an Ubuntu Linux VMware session, my home directory is on the main file system, which is ext4. The directory /mnt/hgfs is reported by ’mount’ to be of type vmhgfs and is shared with the host machine.Create a directory in the home directory and generate a 10 MiB file :
mkdir /home/melanson/dir dd if=/dev/urandom of=/home/melanson/dir/random-file bs=1048576 count=10
Create a directory on the shared drive and copy the same file :
mkdir /mnt/hgfs/vmshare/dir cp /home/melanson/dir/random-file /mnt/hgfs/vmshare/dir
Run ’du’ on each directory using the -k and -h options :
du -k /home/melanson/dir /mnt/hgfs/vmshare/dir 10244 /home/melanson/dir 5120 /mnt/hgfs/vmshare/dir
du -h /home/melanson/dir /mnt/hgfs/vmshare/dir
11M /home/melanson/directory
5.0M /mnt/hgfs/vmshare/directoryI noticed this discrepancy when I was trying to pack a set of files (akin to ’tar’-ing) living in a directory in the shared location. I was going mad trying to understand why the original directory was only 2 MB as reported by ’du’ but the final packed file was 4 MB.
To be fair, the man page for ’du’ succinctly states that the tool’s purpose is merely to "estimate file space usage".