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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

  • 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 (...)

  • Création définitive du canal

    12 mars 2010, par

    Lorsque votre demande est validée, vous pouvez alors procéder à la création proprement dite du canal. Chaque canal est un site à part entière placé sous votre responsabilité. Les administrateurs de la plateforme n’y ont aucun accès.
    A la validation, vous recevez un email vous invitant donc à créer votre canal.
    Pour ce faire il vous suffit de vous rendre à son adresse, dans notre exemple "http://votre_sous_domaine.mediaspip.net".
    A ce moment là un mot de passe vous est demandé, il vous suffit d’y (...)

Sur d’autres sites (14709)

  • avformat/mov : Only read the primary item for AVIF

    28 juin 2022, par Vignesh Venkatasubramanian
    avformat/mov : Only read the primary item for AVIF
    

    Update the still AVIF parser to only read the primary item. With this
    patch, AVIF still images with exif/icc/alpha channel will no longer
    fail to parse.

    For example, this patch enables parsing of files in :
    https://github.com/AOMediaCodec/av1-avif/tree/master/testFiles/Microsoft

    Adding two fate tests :
    1) demuxing of still image with 1 item - this test will pass regardless
    of this patch.
    2) demuxing of still image with 2 items - this test will fail without
    this patch and will pass with patch applied.

    Partially fixes trac ticket #7621

    Signed-off-by : Vignesh Venkatasubramanian <vigneshv@google.com>
    Signed-off-by : James Zern <jzern@google.com>

    • [DH] libavformat/isom.h
    • [DH] libavformat/mov.c
    • [DH] tests/fate/mov.mak
    • [DH] tests/ref/fate/mov-avif-demux-still-image-1-item
    • [DH] tests/ref/fate/mov-avif-demux-still-image-multiple-items
  • Picturebox from AForge FFMPEG empty - C#/WinForms

    1er août 2017, par Jake Delson

    I’ve done a ton of research and looked at a lot of questions here but can’t seem to find anything to help me. I should preface I’m very new to C#, Windows Forms, and SO ! I’m a 1st year CompSci student coming from C++ experimenting with my own projects for the summer. I’m trying to display a series of bitmaps from a .avi using the AForge.Video.FFMPEG video file reader.

    It seems to be finding the file, getting its’ data (console prints dimensions, framerate, and codec) and creating the picturebox, but the picturebox comes up blank/empty. I get the bitmap from the frames of a .avi :

    From AForge example code here

    Then I’m trying to display it with a picture box :

    From MS example code here as well

    And here’s my code. Essentially a combination of the two :

       public class Simple : Form
    {
       Bitmap videoFrame;

       public Simple()
       {
           try
           {
               // create instance of video reader
               VideoFileReader reader = new VideoFileReader();
               // open video file
               reader.Open(@"C:\Users\User\Desktop\ScanTest3.AVI");
               // check some of its attributes
               Console.WriteLine("width:  " + reader.Width);
               Console.WriteLine("height: " + reader.Height);
               Console.WriteLine("fps:    " + reader.FrameRate);
               Console.WriteLine("codec:  " + reader.CodecName);

               PictureBox pictureBox1 = new PictureBox();

               // read 100 video frames out of it
               for (int i = 0; i &lt; 100; i++)
               {
                   videoFrame = reader.ReadVideoFrame();

                   pictureBox1.SizeMode = PictureBoxSizeMode.StretchImage;
                   pictureBox1.ClientSize = new Size(videoFrame.Width, videoFrame.Height);
                   pictureBox1.Image = videoFrame;

                   // dispose the frame when it is no longer required
                   videoFrame.Dispose();
               }

               reader.Close();
           }

           catch
           {
               Console.WriteLine("Nope");
           }

       }
    }

    class MApplication
    {
       public static void Main()
       {
           Application.Run(new Simple());
       }
    }

    So that’s it pretty much. Just a blank picture box coming up, when it should have the first frame of the video, even though no exception caught (though I’m pretty confident I’m using the try/catch very poorly), and the console printing the correct data for the file :

    width:  720
    height: 480
    fps:    29
    codec:  dvvideo
    [swscaler @ 05E10060] Warning: data is not aligned! This can lead to a speedloss

    Though if anyone could tell me what that warning means, that would be great as well, but I’m mainly just lost as to why there’s no picture printing to the screen.

    Thanks !

  • Patent skullduggery : Tandberg rips off x264 algorithm

    25 novembre 2010, par Dark Shikari — patents, ripoffs, x264

    Update : Tandberg claims they came up with the algorithm independently : to be fair, I can actually believe this to some extent, as I think the algorithm is way too obvious to be patented. Of course, they also claim that the algorithm isn’t actually identical, since they don’t want to lose their patent application.

    I still don’t trust them, but it’s possible it’s merely bad research (and thus being unaware of prior art) as opposed to anything malicious. Furthermore, word from within their office suggests they’re quite possibly being honest : supposedly the development team does not read x264 code at all. So this might just all be very bad luck.

    Regardless, the patent is still complete tripe, and should never have been filed.

    Most importantly, stop harassing the guy whose name is on the patent (Lars) : he’s just a programmer, not the management or lawyers responsible for filing the patent. This is stupid and unnecessary. I’ve removed the original post because of this ; it can be found here for those who want to read it.

    Appendix : the details of the patent :

    I figure I’ll go over the exact correspondence between the patent and my code here.

    1. A method for calculating run and level representations of quantized transform coefficients representing pixel values included in a block of a video picture, the method comprising :

    Translation : It’s a run-level coder.

    packing, at a video processing apparatus, each quantized transform coefficients in a value interval [Max, Min] by setting all quantized transform coefficients greater than Max equal to Max, and all quantized transform coefficients less than Min equal to Min

    The quantized coefficients are clipped to a certain valid range to allow them to be packed into bytes (they start as 16-bit values).

    reordering, at the video processing apparatus, the quantized transform ID coefficients according to a predefined order depending on respective positions in the block resulting in an array C of reordered quantized transform coefficients

    This is the zigzag pattern used in H.264 (and most formats) for reordering DCT coefficients. In x264, this is done before the run-level coder ste.

    masking, at the video processing apparatus, C by generating an array M containing ones in positions corresponding to positions of C having non-zero values, and zeros in positions corresponding to positions of C having zero values

    This is creating a bitmask based on the coefficient values, the pmovmskb step.

    is generating, at the video processing apparatus, for each position containing a one in M, a run and a level representation by setting the level value equal to an occurring value in a corresponding position of C ; and setting, at the video processing apparatus, for each position containing a one in M5 the run value equal to the number of proceeding positions relative to a current position in M since a previous occurrence of one in M.

    This is the process of creating run/level values from the bitmask.

    Now into the detailed claims :

    2. The method according to Claim 1, wherein the masking further includes, creating an array C from C where positions corresponding to positions of nonzero values in C are filled with ones, and positions corresponding to positions of zero values in C are filled with zeros, and creating M from C by extracting the most significant bit from values in respective position of C and inserting the bits in corresponding positions in M.

    They’re extracting the most significant bit of the values to create a bitmask. This is exactly what the pmovmskb in my algorithm does.

    3. The method according to Claim 2, wherein the creating of the array C is executed by a C++ function PCMPGTB, and the creating of M from C is executed by a C++ function PMOVMSKB.

    And here they use pcmpgtb (they call it a C++ function for some reason, but it’s a SSE instruction) to do the clipping of the input values. This is exactly the same method I used in decimate_score. They also use pmovmskb as mentioned.

    4. The method according to Claim 1 , wherein the generating of the run and level representation further includes determining positions containing non-zero values in C by corresponding positions containing ones in M.

    5. The method according to Claim 4, wherein the determining of positions containing non-zero values in C is executed by a C++ function BSF.

    Here they iterate over the bitmask of transform coefficients using a “BSF” function to find runs, which is exactly what I did. Of course, BSF isn’t a function, it’s an x86 instruction.

    6. The method according to Claim 1 , wherein Max is 256 and Min is 0.

    This is almost surely a typo or mistake of some sort. They mean the Max should be 255, not 256 : 256 doesn’t fit in a uint8_t.

    7. The method according to Claim 1 , wherein the predefined order follows a zigzag path of transform coefficient positions in the block starting in an upper left corner heading towards a lower right corner.

    This is a description of the typical DCT zigzag pattern (like in H.264, MPEG-2, Theora, etc).

    Everything after this part is just repeating itself with the phrase “an apparatus” added in order to make the USPTO listen to them.