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Médias (3)
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Elephants Dream - Cover of the soundtrack
17 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Image
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Valkaama DVD Label
4 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Février 2013
Langue : English
Type : Image
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Publier une image simplement
13 avril 2011, par ,
Mis à jour : Février 2012
Langue : français
Type : Video
Autres articles (86)
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HTML5 audio and video support
13 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP 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 (...) -
Support audio et vidéo HTML5
10 avril 2011MediaSPIP utilise les balises HTML5 video et audio pour la lecture de documents multimedia en profitant des dernières innovations du W3C supportées par les navigateurs modernes.
Pour les navigateurs plus anciens, le lecteur flash Flowplayer est utilisé.
Le lecteur HTML5 utilisé a été spécifiquement créé pour MediaSPIP : il est complètement modifiable graphiquement pour correspondre à un thème choisi.
Ces technologies permettent de distribuer vidéo et son à la fois sur des ordinateurs conventionnels (...) -
Les formats acceptés
28 janvier 2010, parLes commandes suivantes permettent d’avoir des informations sur les formats et codecs gérés par l’installation local de ffmpeg :
ffmpeg -codecs ffmpeg -formats
Les format videos acceptés en entrée
Cette liste est non exhaustive, elle met en exergue les principaux formats utilisés : h264 : H.264 / AVC / MPEG-4 AVC / MPEG-4 part 10 m4v : raw MPEG-4 video format flv : Flash Video (FLV) / Sorenson Spark / Sorenson H.263 Theora wmv :
Les formats vidéos de sortie possibles
Dans un premier temps on (...)
Sur d’autres sites (10647)
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Best practices for developing scalable video transcoding server on Amazon Web Services ? [closed]
5 février, par undefinedWhat do people think are the most important issues when developing an application that is going to allow users to upload video and images to a server and have them transcoded by FFMPEG and stored in amazon S3 ? I have a couple of options ;


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- install FFMPEG on the same server that handles file uploads, when a video is uploaded and stored on EC2 instance, call FFMPEG to convert it then when done, write the file to S3 bucket and dispose of the original.




How scalable is this ? What happens when many users upload at the same time ? How do I manage multiple processes at once ? How do I know when to start another instance and load balance this configuration ?


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- Have one server for processing uploads (updating database, renaming files etc) and one server for doing transcoding. Again what is the best way to manage multiple processes ? should I be looking at Amazon SQS for this ? Can I tell the transcoding server to get the file from the upload server or should I copy the file to the transcoding server ? Should I just store all files on S3 and SQS can read from there. I am trying to have as little traffic as possible.




I am running a linux box as the upload server and have FFMPEG running on this.


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Amazon Elastic Transcoder vs FFMPEG [closed]
7 juillet 2017, par KiranDI’m developing a website (php based) and there is a provision to upload videos in different formats. I’m using HTML5 player for the front end presentation. So, as the ideal format that is supported by most of the browsers is mp4, I tried using ffmpeg and it works fine.
I would like to know which transcoder (Amazon Elastic Transcoder or FFMPEG) would be best for handling conversions parallely when there is a huge traffic.
There could me approximately thousands of users watching the videos and may be hundreds uploading the videos at the same time. I’m using Amazon EC2 for deployment and the traffic is mostly spiky (not flat).
I’m not sure about the acceptable speed. But, I need the one which can transcode the videos much faster.
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What is the right command to convert an mp3 file to the required codec version (MPEG version 2) and bit rate (48 kbps) for Amazon Alexa SSML ?
1er février 2019, par Asimov4I am trying to convert an mp3 file to the format expected by the audio tag in the Amazon Alexa SSML markup language as described here : https://developer.amazon.com/public/solutions/alexa/alexa-skills-kit/docs/speech-synthesis-markup-language-ssml-reference
The documentation recommends using https://www.ffmpeg.org/ffmpeg.html
I tried this command but can’t find the right codec to use :
ffmpeg -y -i input.mp3 -ar 44100 -ab 48k -codec:a mpeg2 -ac 1 output.mp3
I know I need to convert the file because Alexa fails with the following error :
The audio is not of a supported MPEG version