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Médias (1)

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Autres articles (58)

  • 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

  • Librairies et logiciels spécifiques aux médias

    10 décembre 2010, par

    Pour un fonctionnement correct et optimal, plusieurs choses sont à prendre en considération.
    Il est important, après avoir installé apache2, mysql et php5, d’installer d’autres logiciels nécessaires dont les installations sont décrites dans les liens afférants. Un ensemble de librairies multimedias (x264, libtheora, libvpx) utilisées pour l’encodage et le décodage des vidéos et sons afin de supporter le plus grand nombre de fichiers possibles. Cf. : ce tutoriel ; FFMpeg avec le maximum de décodeurs et (...)

  • List of compatible distributions

    26 avril 2011, par

    The table below is the list of Linux distributions compatible with the automated installation script of MediaSPIP. Distribution nameVersion nameVersion number Debian Squeeze 6.x.x Debian Weezy 7.x.x Debian Jessie 8.x.x Ubuntu The Precise Pangolin 12.04 LTS Ubuntu The Trusty Tahr 14.04
    If you want to help us improve this list, you can provide us access to a machine whose distribution is not mentioned above or send the necessary fixes to add (...)

Sur d’autres sites (7877)

  • FFMpeg video clipping

    8 mars 2012, par integra753

    I would like to use the ffmpeg apis (not the command line) for clipping videos to a specific size (e.g say 1hr video, create a new video starting at 10 minutes and ending at 30 minutes). Are there any examples of doing this out there ?

    I have used the apis to stream and record video so I have a bit of background knowledge.

    Thanks.

  • How to create a video from png images using ffmpeg

    28 décembre 2011, par Rajat

    I want to create a video from different png images. My code is :

    ffmpeg -r 20 -f image2 -i slideshow/%d.png -y -s 320x240 -aspect 4:3 out.mp4

    and i receive output :

    FFmpeg version SVN-r26400, Copyright (c) 2000-2011 the FFmpeg developers
     built on Sep 27 2011 00:47:07 with gcc 4.1.2 20080704 (Red Hat 4.1.2-50)
     configuration: --enable-avfilter --enable-filter=fade
     libavutil     50.36. 0 / 50.36. 0
     libavcore      0.16. 1 /  0.16. 1
     libavcodec    52.108. 0 / 52.108. 0
     libavformat   52.93. 0 / 52.93. 0
     libavdevice   52. 2. 3 / 52. 2. 3
     libavfilter    1.74. 0 /  1.74. 0
     libswscale     0.12. 0 /  0.12. 0
    Input #0, image2, from 'slideshow/%d.png':
     Duration: 00:00:00.25, start: 0.000000, bitrate: N/A
       Stream #0.0: Video: png, rgb24, 720x471, 20 fps, 20 tbr, 20 tbn, 20 tbc
    [buffer @ 0x9687230] w:720 h:471 pixfmt:rgb24
    [scale @ 0x9687600] w:720 h:471 fmt:rgb24 -> w:320 h:240 fmt:yuv420p flags:0xa0000004
    Output #0, mp4, to 'out.mp4':
     Metadata:
       encoder         : Lavf52.93.0
       Stream #0.0: Video: mpeg4, yuv420p, 320x240 [PAR 1:1 DAR 4:3], q=2-31, 200 kb/s, 20 tbn, 20 tbc
    Stream mapping:
     Stream #0.0 -> #0.0
    Press [q] to stop encoding
    Segmentation fault

    What might be the problem ? Please help...
    Currently i am using centos 5 server.

  • Recommendations for real-time pixel-level analysis of television (TV) video

    6 décembre 2011, par Randall Cook

    [Note : This is a rewrite of an earlier question that was considered inappropriate and closed.]

    I need to do some pixel-level analysis of television (TV) video. The exact nature of this analysis is not pertinent, but it basically involves looking at every pixel of every frame of TV video, starting from an MPEG-2 transport stream. The host platform will be server-class, multiprocessor 64-bit Linux machines.

    I need a library that can handle the decoding of the transport stream and present me with the image data in real-time. OpenCV and ffmpeg are two libraries that I am considering for this work. OpenCV is appealing because I have heard it has easy to use APIs and rich image analysis support, but I have no experience using it. I have used ffmpeg in the past for extracting video frame data from files for analysis, but it lacks image analysis support (though Intel's IPP can supplement).

    In addition to general recommendations for approaches to this problem (excluding the actual image analysis), I have some more specific questions that would help me get started :

    1. Are ffmpeg or OpenCV commonly used in industry as a foundation for real-time
      video analysis, or is there something else I should be looking at ?
    2. Can OpenCV decode video frames in real time, and still leave enough
      CPU left over to do nontrivial image analysis, also in real-time ?
    3. Is sufficient to use ffpmeg for MPEG-2 transport stream decoding, or
      is it preferable to just use an MPEG-2 decoding library directly (and if so, which one) ?
    4. Are there particular pixel formats for the output frames that ffmpeg
      or OpenCV is particularly efficient at producing (like RGB, YUV, or YUV422, etc) ?