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  • Des sites réalisés avec MediaSPIP

    2 mai 2011, par

    Cette page présente quelques-uns des sites fonctionnant sous MediaSPIP.
    Vous pouvez bien entendu ajouter le votre grâce au formulaire en bas de page.

  • Use, discuss, criticize

    13 avril 2011, par

    Talk to people directly involved in MediaSPIP’s development, or to people around you who could use MediaSPIP to share, enhance or develop their creative projects.
    The bigger the community, the more MediaSPIP’s potential will be explored and the faster the software will evolve.
    A discussion list is available for all exchanges between users.

  • 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.

Sur d’autres sites (6889)

  • ffmpeg with opengl_es on Android

    21 juin 2012, par ksharp

    This is driving me crazy. I do know how to make ffmpeg decode videos&make opengl show contents on Android .But I can never make them together. FFmpeg keeps decoding frames while OpenGL has its own circle.How to make them co-work/sync ? Well,I mean OpenGL can show every frame right after decoded by ffmpeg ? Can I just call the decode methods in OpenGL onDrawFrame() method(by jni) ?What about the audiotrack then ?
    Thx !

  • FFMPEG Does not work on Windows Server 2008

    25 août 2011, par Khaldoun

    I have an ASP.NET MVC Web Site ,the user can upload a video and When Done It finish uploading I show him an image extracted from the Video,
    To do this I used the FFMPEG exe to get a frame.
    Everthing works well in the developement machine , when I use the test environement it does not work !!
    I've given the read/write and execute permissions to following folders :
    1. videos(folder that store uploaded video files)
    2. thumbnails (folder that store the thumbnails of videos, captured by ffmpeg)
    3.ffmpeg.exe file at root and given read/write execute permissions to that file also.
    but it does not work.

    var _converter = new ImageConvertor(@System.Configuration.ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["FFmpegExec"].ToString());
               _converter.WorkingPath = Server.MapPath("~/VideoSamples");
               OutputPackage oo = _converter.ConvertToFLV(videoFilepath);
               FileStream outStream = System.IO.File.OpenWrite(Path.Combine(Server.MapPath("~/VideoSamples"), id.ToString() + ".flv"));
               oo.VideoStream.WriteTo(outStream);

    This Code Works on developement env but not in test env !!!
    Any Ideas Please

  • Revisiting Nosefart and Discovering GME

    30 mai 2011, par Multimedia Mike — Game Hacking

    I found the following screenshot buried deep in an old directory structure of mine :



    I tried to recall how this screenshot came to exist. Had I actually created a functional KDE frontend to Nosefart yet neglected to release it ? I think it’s more likely that I used some designer tool (possibly KDevelop) to prototype a frontend. This would have been sometime in 2000.

    However, this screenshot prompted me to revisit Nosefart.

    Nosefart Background
    Nosefart is a program that can play Nintendo Sound Format (NSF) files. NSF files are files containing components that were surgically separated from Nintendo Entertainment System (NES) ROM dumps. These components contain the music playback engines for various games. An NSF player is a stripped down emulation system that can simulate the NES6502 CPU along with the custom hardware (2 square waves, 1 triangle wave, 1 noise generator, and 1 limited digital channel).

    Nosefart was written by Matt Conte and eventually imported into a Sourceforge project, though it has not seen any development since then. The distribution contains standalone command line players for Linux and DOS, a GTK frontend for the Linux command line version, and plugins for Winamp, XMMS, and CL-Amp.

    The Sourceforge project page notes that Nosefart is also part of XBMC. Let the record show that Nosefart is also incorporated into xine (I did that in 2002, I think).

    Upgrading the API
    When I tried running the command line version of Nosefart under Linux, I hit hard against the legacy audio API : OSS. Remember that ?

    In fairly short order, I was able to upgrade the CL program to use PulseAudio. The program is not especially sophisticated. It’s a single-threaded affair which checks for a keypress, processes an audio frame, and sends the frame out to the OSS file interface. All that was needed was to rewrite open_hardware() and close_hardware() for PA and then replace the write statement in play(). The only quirk that stood out is that including <pulse/pulseaudio.h> is insufficient for programming PA’s simple API. <pulse/simple.h> must be included separately.

    For extra credit, I adapted the program to ALSA. The program uses the most simplistic audio output API possible — just keep filling a buffer and sending it out to the DAC.

    Discovering GME
    I’m not sure what to do with the the program now since, during my research to attempt to bring Nosefart up to date, I became aware of a software library named Game Music Emu, or GME. It’s a pure C++ library that can essentially play any classic video game format you can possible name. Wow. A lot can happen in 10 years when you’re not paying attention.

    It’s such a well-written library that I didn’t need any tutorial or documentation to come up to speed. Just a quick read of the main gme.h header library enabled me in short order to whip up a quick C program that could play NSF and SPC files. Path of least resistance : Client program asks library to open a hardcoded file, synthesize 10 seconds of audio, and dump it into a file ; ask the FLAC command line program to transcode raw data to .flac file ; use ffplay to verify the results.

    I might develop some other uses for this library.