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Mot : - Tags -/open film making

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    5 septembre 2013, par

    Certains thèmes prennent en compte trois éléments de personnalisation : l’ajout d’un logo ; l’ajout d’une bannière l’ajout d’une image de fond ;

  • 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 (...)

  • 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.
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Sur d’autres sites (11796)

  • Libavcodec "the procedure entry point for av_frame_alloc could not be located" error in Visual Studio 2017 C++ project

    25 novembre 2019, par Aves

    I am trying to use libavcodec from ffmpeg library in C++ with Visual Studio 2017 Community. I downloaded the latest x64 dev and shared builds from zeranoe (version 20171217), set up include directories and additional libraries in Visual Studio for x64 build, added DLL files from shared package to my PATH.

    This is my sample test code :

    extern "C" {
    #include
    }
    int main() {
       avcodec_register_all();
       AVFrame *pAvFrame = av_frame_alloc();
       av_frame_free(&pAvFrame);
       return 0;
    }

    The code compiles without problems but when I run the application I see a dialogue window with error message "the procedure entry point for av_frame_alloc could not be located in DLL" (actual message is not in English, this is the translated version).

    I tried to set Linker->Optimization->References to /OPT:NOREF as it was advised in the similar questions but it did not help.

    Dependency walker shows that av_frame_alloc is exported, "Entry Point" is not bound. A little bit strange is that av_frame_alloc is displayed in both avcodec-58.dll (as red) and avutil-56.dll (as green). Maybe the reason is that the application is trying to get this function from avcodec instead of avutil, but I’m not sure, since I did not check the source code of these libraries.

    So the question is how to set up such a simple FFMPEG-based C++ project in VS2017, where I’m wrong ?

    UPD. 1.

    Linker flags : /OUT :"C :\work\code\TestFfmpeg\x64\Release\TestFfmpeg.exe" /MANIFEST /NXCOMPAT /PDB :"C :\work\code\TestFfmpeg\x64\Release\TestFfmpeg.pdb" /DYNAMICBASE "c :\work\dev\ffmpeg-20171217-387ee1d-win64-dev\lib*.lib" "kernel32.lib" "user32.lib" "gdi32.lib" "winspool.lib" "comdlg32.lib" "advapi32.lib" "shell32.lib" "ole32.lib" "oleaut32.lib" "uuid.lib" "odbc32.lib" "odbccp32.lib" /DEBUG:FULL /MACHINE:X64 /OPT:NOREF /PGD :"C :\work\code\TestFfmpeg\x64\Release\TestFfmpeg.pgd" /MANIFESTUAC :"level=’asInvoker’ uiAccess=’false’" /ManifestFile :"x64\Release\TestFfmpeg.exe.intermediate.manifest" /OPT:ICF /ERRORREPORT:PROMPT /NOLOGO /TLBID:1

  • How to estimate bandwidth / speed requirements for real-time streaming video ?

    19 juin 2016, par Vivek Seth

    For a project I’m working on, I’m trying to stream video to an iPhone through its headphone jack. My estimated bitrate is about 200kbps (If i’m wrong about this, please ignore that).

    I’d like to squeeze as much performance out of this bitrate as possible and sound is not important for me, only video. My understanding is that to stream a a real-time video I will need to encode it with some codec on-the-fly and send compressed frames to the iPhone for it to decode and render. Based on my research, it seems that H.265 is one of the most space efficient codecs available so i’m considering using that.

    Assuming my basic understanding of live streaming is correct, how would I estimate the FPS I could achieve for a given resolution using the H.265 codec ?

    The best solution I can think of it to take a video file, encode it with H.265 and trim it to 1 minute of length to see how large the file is. The issue I see with this approach is that I think my calculations would include some overhead from the video container format (AVI, MKV, etc) and from the audio channels that I don’t care about.

  • fate/speedhq : Fix test requirements

    22 avril 2022, par Andreas Rheinhardt
    fate/speedhq : Fix test requirements
    

    Signed-off-by : Andreas Rheinhardt <andreas.rheinhardt@outlook.com>

    • [DH] tests/fate/speedhq.mak