Recherche avancée

Médias (1)

Mot : - Tags -/belgique

Autres articles (96)

  • MediaSPIP 0.1 Beta version

    25 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP 0.1 beta is the first version of MediaSPIP proclaimed as "usable".
    The zip file provided here only contains the sources of MediaSPIP in its standalone version.
    To get a working installation, you must manually install all-software dependencies on the server.
    If you want to use this archive for an installation in "farm mode", you will also need to proceed to other manual (...)

  • Multilang : améliorer l’interface pour les blocs multilingues

    18 février 2011, par

    Multilang est un plugin supplémentaire qui n’est pas activé par défaut lors de l’initialisation de MediaSPIP.
    Après son activation, une préconfiguration est mise en place automatiquement par MediaSPIP init permettant à la nouvelle fonctionnalité d’être automatiquement opérationnelle. Il n’est donc pas obligatoire de passer par une étape de configuration pour cela.

  • ANNEXE : Les plugins utilisés spécifiquement pour la ferme

    5 mars 2010, par

    Le site central/maître de la ferme a besoin d’utiliser plusieurs plugins supplémentaires vis à vis des canaux pour son bon fonctionnement. le plugin Gestion de la mutualisation ; le plugin inscription3 pour gérer les inscriptions et les demandes de création d’instance de mutualisation dès l’inscription des utilisateurs ; le plugin verifier qui fournit une API de vérification des champs (utilisé par inscription3) ; le plugin champs extras v2 nécessité par inscription3 (...)

Sur d’autres sites (8691)

  • Expand (extend) a video to an specific duration

    8 février 2013, par BorrajaX

    Do VLC or FFmpeg (or AVconv) have any feature to force the duration of a video to a certain number of seconds ?

    Let's say I have a... 5 minutes .mp4 video (without audio). Is there a way to have any of the aforementioned tools "expanding" the video to a longer duration ? The video comes from a Power Point slideshow, but it's too short (running too fast, to say so). The idea would be automatically inserting frames so it reaches an specified duration. It looks like something pretty doable (erm... for a total newbie in video encoding/transcoding as I am) : A 5 minutes video, at 30fps means I have 9000 frames... To make it be 10 times longer, get the first "real" frame, copy it ten times, then get the second "real" frame, copy it ten times... and so on.

    I'm using Ubuntu 12.04, but I can install/compile any required software, if needed. So far, I have VLC, AVConv and FFmpeg (FFmpeg in an specific folder, so it won't conflict with AVConv)

    Thank you in advance.

  • Video processing to support different web players and qualities [closed]

    15 mai 2013, par Linas

    I am trying to accomplish something similar to youtube player.

    The biggest issues I'm facing now is how should I process user uploaded video file.

    For example since i want to switch between 240p, 360p, 480p and 720p I need to convert uploaded video file to 4 different files for each resolution, and because not all browsers can play mp4 i need ogg, mp4, webm, so that makes 12 video files, and say if it takes 10 minutes to process 1h video file it would take me about 2h just to process that file which is insane. I know that youtube is ussing cloud servers to process each video file and they have a lot of processing power but I think there some kind of trick to this.

    So my question is what can i do about this, and how does youtube deal with this ?

    My second question is ffmpeg suited for this kind of work, and if so why does this command takes pretty much for ever to finish, I ran this command on a 720p 3minutes long video file and after 15minutes of processing I just canceled the process.

    ffmpeg -i hd.webm a.mp4

    This one on the other hand took about 7 minutes to finish but it generated 200mb video file out of 25mb file

    ffmpeg -i hd.webm -c:v libx264 -preset ultrafast a.mp4

  • Processing a video on a webserver [on hold]

    6 septembre 2013, par Django Reinhardt

    A client is interested in applying a Sepia style filter, as well as title cards, to user-uploaded videos on their website. This would obviously be automated on their webserver, and it seems ffmpeg, dvd-slideshow and/or aviDemux are good ways to make this happen.

    Unfortunately, from what I've read, such processing would require a lot of webserver CPU power — far more than the average webserver usually has. How can I practically perform these calculations on a website ?

    Should I just try and go for a beefy dedicated hosting package, or can I rent another server that's more suited to video processing ?