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  • Le profil des utilisateurs

    12 avril 2011, par

    Chaque utilisateur dispose d’une page de profil lui permettant de modifier ses informations personnelle. Dans le menu de haut de page par défaut, un élément de menu est automatiquement créé à l’initialisation de MediaSPIP, visible uniquement si le visiteur est identifié sur le site.
    L’utilisateur a accès à la modification de profil depuis sa page auteur, un lien dans la navigation "Modifier votre profil" est (...)

  • Configurer la prise en compte des langues

    15 novembre 2010, par

    Accéder à la configuration et ajouter des langues prises en compte
    Afin de configurer la prise en compte de nouvelles langues, il est nécessaire de se rendre dans la partie "Administrer" du site.
    De là, dans le menu de navigation, vous pouvez accéder à une partie "Gestion des langues" permettant d’activer la prise en compte de nouvelles langues.
    Chaque nouvelle langue ajoutée reste désactivable tant qu’aucun objet n’est créé dans cette langue. Dans ce cas, elle devient grisée dans la configuration et (...)

  • XMP PHP

    13 mai 2011, par

    Dixit Wikipedia, XMP signifie :
    Extensible Metadata Platform ou XMP est un format de métadonnées basé sur XML utilisé dans les applications PDF, de photographie et de graphisme. Il a été lancé par Adobe Systems en avril 2001 en étant intégré à la version 5.0 d’Adobe Acrobat.
    Étant basé sur XML, il gère un ensemble de tags dynamiques pour l’utilisation dans le cadre du Web sémantique.
    XMP permet d’enregistrer sous forme d’un document XML des informations relatives à un fichier : titre, auteur, historique (...)

Sur d’autres sites (10509)

  • Theatrical quality ffmpeg/x264 encoding of a high-motion 1080p video

    2 décembre 2011, par Ian

    I've been struggling with encoding videos using FFMPEG and x264. The output stutters when played back in Quicktime, while in VLC it shows a lot of compression artifacts at the same places Quicktime stutters. So it seems like Quicktime is stuttering because it's trying to suppress the corruption/artifacts.

    The videos have a lot of random motion in them, including frames where 75% of the pixels will change at a random interval (the video is software generated so it's truly pseudo-random). The compression seems to be choking in these places where it's likely detecting a "scene cut" incorrectly. It also seems to choke at regular intervals where I guess it's doing a keyframe.

    I've based my encoding preset off of the x264-hq preset that comes with FFMPEG. I've tried turning off scene cut detection, and playing with the keyint/g and keyint_min options. Setting g to 1 makes it work, but blows out the filesize. I've tried the lossless presets, but they won't playback at all in Quicktime. Oddly, I haven't had any problems when working with a lower-resolution test video (1440x810).

    Here's the preset I have right now, which works, but yields a file that's approximately 60% larger than the (non-working) hq preset yields. Is there any way to improve upon this ? The filesize doesn't matter much, I just want something that will playback anywhere and be very high quality.

    coder=1
    flags=+loop
    cmp=+chroma
    partitions=+parti8x8+parti4x4+partp8x8+partp4x4+partb8x8
    me_method=umh
    subq=8
    me_range=16
    g=1
    keyint_min=1
    sc_threshold=0
    i_qfactor=0.71
    b_strategy=1crf=20
    qcomp=0.6
    qmin=20
    qmax=51
    qdiff=4
    bf=16
    refs=4
    trellis=1
    flags2=+dct8x8+wpred+bpyramid+mixed_refs
    wpredp=2
    

    Here's the command :

    ffmpeg \
      -r 60 -i "frame-%06d.tiff" \
      -vcodec libx264 -vpre my_preset \
      -threads 0 \
      -r 60 -an -f out.mp4
    
  • Theatrical quality ffmpeg/x264 encoding of a high-motion 1080p video

    2 décembre 2011, par Ian

    I've been struggling with encoding videos using FFMPEG and x264. The output stutters when played back in Quicktime, while in VLC it shows a lot of compression artifacts at the same places Quicktime stutters. So it seems like Quicktime is stuttering because it's trying to suppress the corruption/artifacts.

    The videos have a lot of random motion in them, including frames where 75% of the pixels will change at a random interval (the video is software generated so it's truly pseudo-random). The compression seems to be choking in these places where it's likely detecting a "scene cut" incorrectly. It also seems to choke at regular intervals where I guess it's doing a keyframe.

    I've based my encoding preset off of the x264-hq preset that comes with FFMPEG. I've tried turning off scene cut detection, and playing with the keyint/g and keyint_min options. Setting g to 1 makes it work, but blows out the filesize. I've tried the lossless presets, but they won't playback at all in Quicktime. Oddly, I haven't had any problems when working with a lower-resolution test video (1440x810).

    Here's the preset I have right now, which works, but yields a file that's approximately 60% larger than the (non-working) hq preset yields. Is there any way to improve upon this ? The filesize doesn't matter much, I just want something that will playback anywhere and be very high quality.

    coder=1
    flags=+loop
    cmp=+chroma
    partitions=+parti8x8+parti4x4+partp8x8+partp4x4+partb8x8
    me_method=umh
    subq=8
    me_range=16
    g=1
    keyint_min=1
    sc_threshold=0
    i_qfactor=0.71
    b_strategy=1crf=20
    qcomp=0.6
    qmin=20
    qmax=51
    qdiff=4
    bf=16
    refs=4
    trellis=1
    flags2=+dct8x8+wpred+bpyramid+mixed_refs
    wpredp=2
    

    Here's the command :

    ffmpeg \
      -r 60 -i "frame-%06d.tiff" \
      -vcodec libx264 -vpre my_preset \
      -threads 0 \
      -r 60 -an -f out.mp4
    
  • lavc : drop encode() support for video.

    23 février 2012, par Anton Khirnov

    lavc : drop encode() support for video.