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Médias (3)
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MediaSPIP Simple : futur thème graphique par défaut ?
26 septembre 2013, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2013
Langue : français
Type : Video
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GetID3 - Bloc informations de fichiers
9 avril 2013, par
Mis à jour : Mai 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
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GetID3 - Boutons supplémentaires
9 avril 2013, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
Autres articles (71)
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Use, discuss, criticize
13 avril 2011, parTalk 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. -
MediaSPIP Player : les contrôles
26 mai 2010, parLes contrôles à la souris du lecteur
En plus des actions au click sur les boutons visibles de l’interface du lecteur, il est également possible d’effectuer d’autres actions grâce à la souris : Click : en cliquant sur la vidéo ou sur le logo du son, celui ci se mettra en lecture ou en pause en fonction de son état actuel ; Molette (roulement) : en plaçant la souris sur l’espace utilisé par le média (hover), la molette de la souris n’exerce plus l’effet habituel de scroll de la page, mais diminue ou (...) -
MediaSPIP version 0.1 Beta
16 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP 0.1 beta est la première version de MediaSPIP décrétée comme "utilisable".
Le fichier zip ici présent contient uniquement les sources de MediaSPIP en version standalone.
Pour avoir une installation fonctionnelle, il est nécessaire d’installer manuellement l’ensemble des dépendances logicielles sur le serveur.
Si vous souhaitez utiliser cette archive pour une installation en mode ferme, il vous faudra également procéder à d’autres modifications (...)
Sur d’autres sites (10054)
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How to create buffer for video streaming
4 juin 2014, par John SimpsonI am developing a Android video player that can play RTSP Stream. I use ffmpeg in jni part to get and decode RTSP Stream. For now, the player can play and then pause video stream. The next step is to create a buffer for the player so that when user pauses video, the player can still load video stream in the next several seconds.
Is there any good documentation on how to create a buffer for video streaming in proper way ?
My plan is to create a array of packets. When the array is full, the player calls
av_read_pause();
to stop buffering. When the array has spaces, the player will call
av_read_play();
to continue buffering. There is a read_thread for getting packets from the buffer and the decode the packets. The read_thread will stop (resume), when user pauses (resume) video.
Can this plan work ?
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Anomalie #2240 (Nouveau) : Chaînes de langue manquantes
21 août 2011, par Johan PustochDans la dist : dans rubrique.html, mot.html, recherche.html et modeles/plan.html (chaîne de langue de l’extension breves a priori : ) dans inclure/forum.html, 2 fois. (chaîne de langue de l’extension forum a priori ) Dans lapartie privée : info_email dans (...)
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VP8 Codec SDK "Aylesbury" Release
28 octobre 2010, par noreply@blogger.com (John Luther)Today we’re making available "Aylesbury," our first named release of libvpx, the VP8 codec SDK. VP8 is the video codec used in WebM. Note that the VP8 specification has not changed, only the SDK.
What’s an Aylesbury ? It’s a breed of duck. We like ducks, so we plan to use duck-related names for each major libvpx release, in alphabetical order. Our goal is to have one named release of libvpx per calendar quarter, each with a theme.
You can download the Aylesbury libvpx release from our Downloads page or check it out of our Git repository and build it yourself. In the coming days Aylesbury will be integrated into all of the WebM project components (DirectShow filters, QuickTime plugins, etc.). We encourage anyone using our components to upgrade to the Aylesbury releases.
For Aylesbury the theme was faster decoder, better encoder. We used our May 19, 2010 launch release of libvpx as the benchmark. We’re very happy with the results (see graphs below) :
- 20-40% (average 28%) improvement in libvpx decoder speed
- Over 7% overall PSNR improvement (6.3% SSIM) in VP8 "best" quality encoding mode, and up to 60% improvement on very noisy, still or slow moving source video.
The main improvements to the decoder are :
- Single-core assembly "hot spot" optimizations, including improved vp8_sixtap_predict() and SSE2 loopfilter functions
- Threading improvements for more efficient use of multiple processor cores
- Improved memory handling and reduced footprint
- Combining IDCT and reconstruction steps
- SSSE3 usage in functions where appropriate
On the encoder front, we concentrated on clips in the 30-45 dB range and saw the biggest gains in higher-quality source clips (greater that 38 dB), low to medium-motion clips, and clips with noisy source material. Many code contributions made this possible, but a few of the highlights were :
- Adaptive width and strength alternate reference frame noise suppression filter with optional motion compensation.
- Transform improvements (improved accuracy and reduction in round trip error)
- Trellis-based quantized coefficient optimization
- Two-pass rate control and quantizer changes
- Rate distortion changes
- Zero bin and rounding changes
- Work on MB-level quality control and bit allocation
We’re targeting Q1 2011 for the next named libvpx release, which we’re calling Bali. The theme for that release will be faster encoder. We are constantly working on improvements to video quality in the encoder, so after Aylesbury we won’t tie that work to specific named releases.
WebM at Streaming Media West
Members of the WebM project will discuss Aylesbury during a session at the Streaming Media West conference on November 3rd (session C203 : WebM Open Video Project Update). For more information, visit www.streamingmedia.com/west.
John Luther is Product Manager of the WebM Project.