Recherche avancée

Médias (0)

Mot : - Tags -/images

Aucun média correspondant à vos critères n’est disponible sur le site.

Autres articles (96)

  • 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

  • HTML5 audio and video support

    13 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP uses HTML5 video and audio tags to play multimedia files, taking advantage of the latest W3C innovations supported by modern browsers.
    The MediaSPIP player used has been created specifically for MediaSPIP and can be easily adapted to fit in with a specific theme.
    For older browsers the Flowplayer flash fallback is used.
    MediaSPIP allows for media playback on major mobile platforms with the above (...)

  • Emballe médias : à quoi cela sert ?

    4 février 2011, par

    Ce plugin vise à gérer des sites de mise en ligne de documents de tous types.
    Il crée des "médias", à savoir : un "média" est un article au sens SPIP créé automatiquement lors du téléversement d’un document qu’il soit audio, vidéo, image ou textuel ; un seul document ne peut être lié à un article dit "média" ;

Sur d’autres sites (8001)

  • streaming mp4 file to html5 video [on hold]

    25 juillet 2016, par Felix

    I want to stream a mp4 file to html5 video tag.

    want to user ffmpeg stream from file.

    What I want is that the user cannot see the path of the movie.

    Is there a way ?

  • iOS how to convert video mp4 other codecs in libavcodec [closed]

    17 décembre 2011, par Bai

    I am developing the ios app that captures the video in iPad and uploads the video captured(.mp4) to the server.

    I must convert the video to other codecs for reducing the size of the video. So I am going to use libavcodec.

    But I am beginner in video/audio codecs. I didn't find the method for using libavcodec apis.

    How can I convert the .mp4 video to other codecs using libavcodec ?

  • Turn image sequence into video with transparency

    29 janvier 2014, par Cody Hatch

    I've got what seems like it should be a really simple problem, but it's proving much harder than I expected. Here's the issue :

    I've got a fairly large image sequence consisting of numbered frames (output from Maya, for what its worth). The images are currently in Targa (.tga) format, but I could convert them to PNGs or other arbitrary format if that matters. The important thing is, they've got an alpha channel.

    What I want to do is programatically turn them into a video clip. The format doesn't really matter, but it needs to be lossless and have an alpha channel. Uncompressed video in a Quicktime container would probably be ideal.

    My initial thought was ffmpeg, but after wasting most of a day on it it seems it's got no support at all for alpha channels. Either I'm missing something, or the underlying libavcodec just doesn't do it.

    So, what's the right way here ? A command line tool like ffmpeg would be nice, but any solution that runs on Windows and could be called from a script would be fine.

    Note : Having an alpha chanel in your video isn't actually all that uncommon, and it's really useful if you want to composite it on top of another video clip or a still image. As far as I know uncompressed video, the Quicktime Animation codec, and the Sorenson Video 3 codec all support tranparency, and I've heard H.264 does as well. All we're really talking about is 32-bit color depth, and that's pretty widely supported ; both Quicktime .mov files and Windowss .avi files can handle it, and probably a lot more too.

    Quicktime Pro is more than happy to turn an image sequence into a 32-bit .mov file. Hit export, change color depth to "Millions of Colors+", select the Animation codec, crank the quality up to 100, and there you are - losslessly compressed video, with an alpha chanel, and it'll play back almost anywhere since the codec has been part of Quicktime since version 1.0. The problem is, Quicktime Pro doesn't have any sort of command-line interface (at least on Windows). ffmpeg supports encoding using the Quicktime Animation codec (which it calls qtrle), but it only supports a bit-depth of 24 bits.

    The issue isn't finding a video format that supports an alpha channel. Quicktime Animation would be ideal, but even uncompressed video should work. The problem is finding a tool that supports it.