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Autres articles (94)

  • 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

  • Contribute to a better visual interface

    13 avril 2011

    MediaSPIP is based on a system of themes and templates. Templates define the placement of information on the page, and can be adapted to a wide range of uses. Themes define the overall graphic appearance of the site.
    Anyone can submit a new graphic theme or template and make it available to the MediaSPIP community.

  • Contribute to documentation

    13 avril 2011

    Documentation is vital to the development of improved technical capabilities.
    MediaSPIP welcomes documentation by users as well as developers - including : critique of existing features and functions articles contributed by developers, administrators, content producers and editors screenshots to illustrate the above translations of existing documentation into other languages
    To contribute, register to the project users’ mailing (...)

Sur d’autres sites (7322)

  • Create a video from JPG without have all pictures at begining with ffmpeg

    30 mars, par Chklang

    I have a game which can create some screenshots, and I want to transform them to mp4 video. So I've the next command :

    


    ffmpeg -framerate 15 -i %06d.png -s hd1080 -vcodec libx264 -r 30 timelapse.mp4


    


    But my game lasts 8h, so, after have auto-compress pictures, I've more than 9To of pictures. So I want to start the ffmpeg process before the end of pictures generation, so I want that ffmpeg wait the next picture to digest it.

    


    How can I do it ?

    


  • Releasing GME Players and Tools

    22 mai 2012, par Multimedia Mike — General, alsa, github, gme, pulseaudio, Python, sdl

    I just can’t stop living in the past. To that end, I’ve been playing around with the Game Music Emu (GME) library again. This is a software library that plays an impressive variety of special music files extracted from old video games.

    I have just posted a series of GME tools and associated utilities up on Github.

    Clone the repo and try them out. The repo includes a small test corpus since one of the most tedious parts about playing these files tends to be tracking them down in the first place.

    Players
    At first, I started with trying to write some simple command line audio output programs based on GME. GME has to be the simplest software library that it has ever been my pleasure to code against. All it took was a quick read through the gme.h header file and it was immediately obvious how to write a simple program.

    First, I wrote a command line tool that output audio through PulseAudio on Linux. Then I made a second program that used ALSA. Guess what I learned through this exercise ? PulseAudio is actually far easier to program than ALSA.

    I also created an SDL player, seen in my last post regarding how to write an oscilloscope. I think I have the A/V sync correct now. It’s a little more fun to use than the command line tools. It also works on non-Linux platforms (tested at least on Mac OS X).

    Utilities
    I also wrote some utilities. I’m interested in exporting metadata from these rather opaque game music files in order to make them a bit more accessible. To that end, I wrote gme2json, a program that uses the GME library to fetch data from a game music file and then print it out in JSON format. This makes it trivial to extract the data from a large corpus of game music files and work with it in many higher level languages.

    Finally, I wrote a few utilities that repack certain ad-hoc community-supported game music archives into... well, an ad-hoc game music archive of my own device. Perhaps it’s a bit NIH syndrome, but I don’t think certain of these ad-hoc community formats were very well thought-out, or perhaps made sense a decade or more ago. I guess I’m trying to bring a bit of innovation to this archival process.

    Endgame
    I haven’t given up on that SaltyGME idea (playing these game music files directly in a Google Chrome web browser via Google Chrome). All of this ancillary work is leading up to that goal.

    Silly ? Perhaps. But I still think it would be really neat to be able to easily browse and play these songs, and make them accessible to a broader audience.

  • Output a Java window as a webcam stream

    15 juin 2012, par Zac

    I would like to write a program perferably in Java that can display animated overlays on a screen.

    The screen will then be broadcast streamed over the internet using a separate program called x-split.

    A good way to do this would be to create a transparent window in java which will display animated files (with transparancy) and the output of this window (Its display) should ideally appear in the webcam device list so it can be easily picked up by x-split which will allow it to be arranged ontop of the game screen I'm currently broadcasting.

    An example program of this type would be one where a webcam image is displayed and "virtual glasses" overlayed over the image of a persons face which could then be transmitted as an output cam.

    I have found the java 6u10-translucent-shapes library to create the transparent window but I don't know how to stream it.

    I've read a few things to suggest that JMF and FFMpeg might be the way to go, but I'm not sure what to install and how.

    Any help or pointers to tutorials would be greatly appreciated.