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  • (Dés)Activation de fonctionnalités (plugins)

    18 février 2011, par

    Pour gérer l’ajout et la suppression de fonctionnalités supplémentaires (ou plugins), MediaSPIP utilise à partir de la version 0.2 SVP.
    SVP permet l’activation facile de plugins depuis l’espace de configuration de MediaSPIP.
    Pour y accéder, il suffit de se rendre dans l’espace de configuration puis de se rendre sur la page "Gestion des plugins".
    MediaSPIP est fourni par défaut avec l’ensemble des plugins dits "compatibles", ils ont été testés et intégrés afin de fonctionner parfaitement avec chaque (...)

  • Installation en mode ferme

    4 février 2011, par

    Le mode ferme permet d’héberger plusieurs sites de type MediaSPIP en n’installant qu’une seule fois son noyau fonctionnel.
    C’est la méthode que nous utilisons sur cette même plateforme.
    L’utilisation en mode ferme nécessite de connaïtre un peu le mécanisme de SPIP contrairement à la version standalone qui ne nécessite pas réellement de connaissances spécifique puisque l’espace privé habituel de SPIP n’est plus utilisé.
    Dans un premier temps, vous devez avoir installé les mêmes fichiers que l’installation (...)

  • 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 (...)

Sur d’autres sites (8231)

  • Revision af660715c0 : Make coefficient skip condition an explicit RD choice. This commit replaces zru

    28 juin 2013, par Ronald S. Bultje

    Changed Paths :
     Modify /vp9/common/vp9_rtcd_defs.sh


     Modify /vp9/encoder/vp9_block.h


     Modify /vp9/encoder/vp9_onyx_int.h


     Modify /vp9/encoder/vp9_quantize.c


     Modify /vp9/encoder/vp9_rdopt.c


     Modify /vp9/encoder/x86/vp9_error_sse2.asm



    Make coefficient skip condition an explicit RD choice.

    This commit replaces zrun_zbin_boost, a method of biasing non-zero
    coefficients following runs of zero-coefficients to be rounded towards
    zero, with an explicit skip-block choice in the RD loop.

    The logic is basically that if individual coefficients should be rounded
    towards zero (from a RD point of view), the trellis/optimize loop should
    take care of it. If whole blocks should be zero (from a RD point of
    view), a single RD check is much more efficient than a complete
    serialization of the quantization loop.

    Quality change : derf +0.5% psnr, +1.6% ssim ; yt +0.6% psnr, +1.1% ssim.
    SIMD for quantize will follow in a separate patch. Results for other
    test sets pending.

    Change-Id : Ife5fa641163ac5150ac428011e87188f1937c1f4

  • How would I create a radially offset mosaic of rtsp streams that transitions to a logo

    18 juillet 2018, par Jack

    I’m new to stack overflow, but I’ve been researching how to do this for a couple weeks to no avail. I’m hoping perhaps one of you has some knowledge I haven’t seen online yet.

    Here is a crude illustration of what I hope to accomplish. I have a video wall of eight monitors - four each of two different sizes. The way it’s set up now, all eight monitors are treated together as one big monitor displaying an oddly shaped cutout of a desktop.

    Eventually I need each individual monitor to display a separate RTSP stream for about thirty seconds, then have the entire display - all eight monitors in conjunction - to fade out into a large logo.

    My problem right now is that I don’t know of a way to mask an rtsp stream so it looks like this rather than this, let alone how to arrange them into a weirdly spaced, oddly angled, multiple aspect-ratio mosaic like in the original illustration.

    Thank you all for your time. I’m just an intern here without insane technical knowhow, but I’ll try to clarify as much as I can.

    -J

  • Trouble with frame accuracy applying subcaps using .ass files to 23.976fps video [closed]

    25 août 2023, par WhatsYourFunction

    Currently testing .ass subcaps in a VFX workflow.
The goal is to drop specfic text over specific shots and the in/out points have to be frame accurate
We're working in a 23.976 project.

    


    Currently having no trouble using FFmpeg to generate frame-accurate subclips of individual shots from a full-show export by converting hh:mm:ss:ff to seconds and then handling the 24 to 23.976 offset, using the following alorithm :

    


    InPoint_Seconds = ConvertToSeconds(InPoint_Hmsf_FullShow) - ConvertToSeconds(Start_Hmsf_FullShow) // Convert from SMTPE Time Code to seconds.
InPoint_Seconds = InPoint_Seconds * (1001 / 1000) //Handle 24 to 23.976 offset
OutPoint_Seconds = [Same idea as above]
Duration_Seconds = Output_Seconds - InPoint_Seconds

> ffmpeg -ss InPoint_Seconds -t Duration_Seconds -i SourcePath -c copy DestPath


    


    So generating frame-accurate copies of portions of a larger file works with perfect accuracy

    


    BUT when applying the same logic to subcaps using .ass files, sometimes they land with frame accuracy, and sometimes they don't (They'll be 1 frame late at most, and it does not increase over the span of the source clip).

    


    Curious if anyone has any ideas.