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Médias (1)
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La conservation du net art au musée. Les stratégies à l’œuvre
26 mai 2011
Mis à jour : Juillet 2013
Langue : français
Type : Texte
Autres articles (53)
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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" (...) -
Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins
27 avril 2010, parMediaspip core
autoriser_auteur_modifier() afin que les visiteurs soient capables de modifier leurs informations sur la page d’auteurs
Sur d’autres sites (6273)
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Gettting silence level to be used with silencedetect automatically
3 mai 2017, par P. DeeMy goal is to find the average or maximum silent level in dB to use it with
silencedetect
. I foundvolumedetect
and I thought to use thehistogram_
results to find the lowest dB numbers(low as in -40dB, -50dB etc.) with a high number of occurrences.What is a better idea ? Can it be combined with the silencedetect command, so I don’t need to enter the dB-Value at all ?
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Grep for a number between a certain range - Checking WAV Quality
11 août 2014, par BT643I’m trying to write a regular expression (to be used in conjunction with ffmpeg, which can check that a WAV file is over a certain quality.
The minimum should be :
Audio Channels : 2 (Stereo)
Audio Sample Rate : 44,100 Hz
Audio Bitrate : 1411 Kbps
Audio Bit Depth : 16 bitSo I’ve tried the following commands so far :
/usr/local/bin/ffmpeg -i "/path/to/file.wav" 2>&1 | egrep 'stereo|2 channels'
This works fine to get a stero (2 channel) WAV. I’m getting issues with the next part, searching between a range of numbers.
/usr/local/bin/ffmpeg -i "/path/to/file.wav" 2>&1 | egrep 'stereo|2 channels' | egrep '[41000-196000] Hz'
Obviously this just searches each number individually, so it’s finding results if there’s a 4 OR 1 OR 0 OR 0 OR 0 etc...
The bit rate and bit depth just needs to be OVER 1411 and 16 respectively.
Thanks
EDIT -
Here’s the ffmpeg output for a low quality WAV which should be rejected :ffmpeg version git-2012-05-22-27127eb Copyright (c) 2000-2012 the FFmpeg developers
built on May 22 2012 12:27:21 with gcc 4.6.1
configuration: --enable-gpl --enable-libfaac --enable-libmp3lame --enable-libopencore-amrnb --enable-libopencore-amrwb --enable-libtheora --enable-libvorbis --enable-libx264 --enable-nonfree --enable-postproc --enable-version3 --enable-x11grab
libavutil 51. 53.100 / 51. 53.100
libavcodec 54. 21.101 / 54. 21.101
libavformat 54. 6.100 / 54. 6.100
libavdevice 53. 4.100 / 53. 4.100
libavfilter 2. 75.100 / 2. 75.100
libswscale 2. 1.100 / 2. 1.100
libswresample 0. 15.100 / 0. 15.100
libpostproc 52. 0.100 / 52. 0.100
[wav @ 0x355b140] max_analyze_duration 5000000 reached at 5056000
Guessed Channel Layout for Input Stream #0.0 : stereo
Input #0, wav, from '/path/to/file.wav':
Duration: 00:02:28.47, bitrate: 512 kb/s
Stream #0:0: Audio: pcm_u8 ([1][0][0][0] / 0x0001), 32000 Hz, stereo, u8, 512 kb/s -
hevc : deobfuscate slice/tile boundary handling for DBF
27 juillet 2014, par Anton Khirnov