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  • Publier sur MédiaSpip

    13 juin 2013

    Puis-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

  • Encoding and processing into web-friendly formats

    13 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP 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 (...)

  • Keeping control of your media in your hands

    13 avril 2011, par

    The vocabulary used on this site and around MediaSPIP in general, aims to avoid reference to Web 2.0 and the companies that profit from media-sharing.
    While using MediaSPIP, you are invited to avoid using words like "Brand", "Cloud" and "Market".
    MediaSPIP is designed to facilitate the sharing of creative media online, while allowing authors to retain complete control of their work.
    MediaSPIP aims to be accessible to as many people as possible and development is based on expanding the (...)

Sur d’autres sites (8104)

  • fate : split off lossless video and audio FATE tests into their own files

    14 décembre 2011, par Diego Biurrun

    fate : split off lossless video and audio FATE tests into their own files

  • Node.js asynchronous video conversion slow

    9 décembre 2016, par lukstei

    I wrote a little website/service, which can download a video from a website (currently Youtube) and converts it on the fly to an mp3 file and sends this file back as the response.

    For example, you when you request http://localhost:8000/v=http ://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HhoewflkQu0, then it will download this video and response the audio layer encoded in MP3.

    This all works very well, my problem is that this is very slow and I can’t figure out why.


    Simplified the script behaves like this :

    Download the video and write it to the stdin of ffmpeg, and the stdout goes to the response.
    Video (MP4, FLV) -> FFMPEG -> MP3

    I used curl to figure out how fast the script is :

    $ curl http://localhost:8000/v=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HhoewflkQu0

    I get only about 5-10k.

    So why is this so slow ?

    1. The server, from which I am downloading the video is slow.
    2. The conversion is slow (because of a slow CPU).
    3. The data transfer between node.js -> FFMPEG is slow.

    I tried to download the video in a normal download manager, and i got about 320k, which is my normal download speed, so the first point isn’t the bottleneck.

    To point 2 and 3, I tried to write a local file to the stdin, and I got about 600k so that isn’t it either.

    So why is my script so slow, and what can I do to make it faster ?

    https://gist.github.com/1304637

    Thanks in advance.

  • encoding a video for looping ?

    24 janvier 2013, par bennettk

    This is somewhat related to Looping a video with AVFoundation AVPlayer but that question is answered. What I'm trying to achieve is seamless looping using an AVPlayer. There is a noticeable stutter between loops using h264-encoded videos* that has gotten worse for some reason with the update to iOS 5. Could this have something to do with the way the videos are encoded rather than the AVPlayer ? The looping is triggered by a playerItemDidReachEnd notification as described in the link above.

    Thanks.

    * here's the ffmpeg command we're using to encode the videos, if that helps :

    ffmpeg -i -y -sameq -vcodec libx264 -vpre hq -crf 20 -an

    (yes, the files don't have sound (yet) so the -an is intentional.)