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  • 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

  • HTML5 audio and video support

    13 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP 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 2011

    MediaSPIP 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 (...)

Sur d’autres sites (10197)

  • Revision 37620 : Une erreur sur le select

    24 avril 2010, par kent1@… — Log

    Une erreur sur le select

  • How to read realtime microphone audio volume in python and ffmpeg or similar

    1er septembre 2023, par Ryan Martin

    I'm trying to read, in near-realtime, the volume coming from the audio of a USB microphone in Python.

    


    I have the pieces, but can't figure out how to put it together.

    


    If I already have a .wav file, I can pretty simply read it using wavefile :

    


    from wavefile import WaveReader

with WaveReader("/Users/rmartin/audio.wav") as r:
    for data in r.read_iter(size=512):
        left_channel = data[0]
        volume = np.linalg.norm(left_channel)
        print(volume)


    


    This works great, but I want to process the audio from the microphone in real-time, not from a file.

    


    So my thought was to use something like ffmpeg to PIPE the real-time output into WaveReader, but my Byte knowledge is somewhat lacking.

    


    import subprocess
import numpy as np

command = ["/usr/local/bin/ffmpeg",
            '-f', 'avfoundation',
            '-i', ':2',
            '-t', '5',
            '-ar', '11025',
            '-ac', '1',
            '-acodec','aac', '-']

pipe = subprocess.Popen(command, stdout=subprocess.PIPE, bufsize=10**8)
stdout_data = pipe.stdout.read()
audio_array = np.fromstring(stdout_data, dtype="int16")

print audio_array


    


    That looks pretty, but it doesn't do much. It fails with a [NULL @ 0x7ff640016600] Unable to find a suitable output format for 'pipe:' error.

    


    I assume this is a fairly simple thing to do given that I only need to check the audio for volume levels.

    


    Anyone know how to accomplish this simply ? FFMPEG isn't a requirement, but it does need to work on OSX & Linux.

    


  • select frame of choice for thumbnail in ffmpeg

    1er octobre 2014, par Rks Rock

    Description

    I have successfully installed and used ffmpeg in my project ... I am able to create thumbnails by selecting a frame at X seconds... But that is not enough what if at X seconds there is a blacked out scene in the video or some scene that does not justify what the video is about ..

    So is there a way that I can make a UI that will give the user to select the frame lets say using a track-bar so that user can drag the track bar to a specific frame and select it as a thumbnail like a poster...

    Any one done that ??