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Autres articles (76)

  • Keeping control of your media in your hands

    13 avril 2011, par

    The vocabulary used on this site and around MediaSPIP in general, aims to avoid reference to Web 2.0 and the companies that profit from media-sharing.
    While using MediaSPIP, you are invited to avoid using words like "Brand", "Cloud" and "Market".
    MediaSPIP is designed to facilitate the sharing of creative media online, while allowing authors to retain complete control of their work.
    MediaSPIP aims to be accessible to as many people as possible and development is based on expanding the (...)

  • Les tâches Cron régulières de la ferme

    1er décembre 2010, par

    La gestion de la ferme passe par l’exécution à intervalle régulier de plusieurs tâches répétitives dites Cron.
    Le super Cron (gestion_mutu_super_cron)
    Cette tâche, planifiée chaque minute, a pour simple effet d’appeler le Cron de l’ensemble des instances de la mutualisation régulièrement. Couplée avec un Cron système sur le site central de la mutualisation, cela permet de simplement générer des visites régulières sur les différents sites et éviter que les tâches des sites peu visités soient trop (...)

  • Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins

    27 avril 2010, par

    Mediaspip core
    autoriser_auteur_modifier() afin que les visiteurs soient capables de modifier leurs informations sur la page d’auteurs

Sur d’autres sites (11444)

  • Fastest seek speed and decoding with ffmpeg and x265 ProRes

    17 mai 2018, par Christopher Jarvis

    I’m trying to optimize seek speed with x265. No matter what encoding settings I try, ProRes still seeks more quickly/gracefully. This makes sense since it was built for editing, but I’m sure there’s got to be something I’m missing to better improve x265.

    So far, -tune fastdecode, keyint=1, maxrate and -b (to remove B Frame calculations) yield the best results, but they’re still unsatisfactory. I’ve been pouring over the docs but there’s so much jargon I just don’t understand. Perhaps another codec like VP9 / WebM would be better for this purpose ?

    From what I can tell, there’s no bottleneck with CPU, read speed or RAM... or GPU for that matter. Monitoring these processes show minimal drain. Is there just an amount of decoding in a highly compressed format like x265 that can’t be circumvented ?

    Thank you in advance for your help.

  • configure : select iamfenc as movenc dep

    24 février 2024, par Gyan Doshi
    configure : select iamfenc as movenc dep
    

    Unbreaks movenc compilation in minimal configuration.

    Signed-off-by : James Almer <jamrial@gmail.com>

    • [DH] configure
  • extract timestamp from a frame. OpenCV gives wrong results

    24 juillet 2012, par ar ar ar

    I have an avi video with H264-MPEG-4 AVC codec.

    I have a c++ project in which I use OpenCv. So I take every frame with OpenCv and want to know about the timestamp of the frame in reference to the video length.

    OpenCv p0orperties give me wrong results as for the timestamp and the frame count.

    So I thought of using ffmpeg to extract the correct timestamp of the frame, but my kwoleedge of ffmpeg is minimal.

    Can somebody advice what I need to do ?? Maybe which libraries of ffmpeg to use ?

    Or to give me an answer why is this happening to openCv ?