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Médias (1)
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The pirate bay depuis la Belgique
1er avril 2013, par
Mis à jour : Avril 2013
Langue : français
Type : Image
Autres articles (61)
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Websites made with MediaSPIP
2 mai 2011, parThis page lists some websites based on MediaSPIP.
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Creating farms of unique websites
13 avril 2011, parMediaSPIP platforms can be installed as a farm, with a single "core" hosted on a dedicated server and used by multiple websites.
This allows (among other things) : implementation costs to be shared between several different projects / individuals rapid deployment of multiple unique sites creation of groups of like-minded sites, making it possible to browse media in a more controlled and selective environment than the major "open" (...) -
Publier sur MédiaSpip
13 juin 2013Puis-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
Sur d’autres sites (13445)
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Building FFMPEGINTEROP with Visual Studio 2017 ?
25 septembre 2018, par Francois GagnonI’m working on a project that requires a video player. I’ve been using the standard UWP MediaPlayerElement but it refuses to read many types of videos, including ASF and FLV and some older MPG.
I’ve read that ffmpeginterop is more compatible with a variety of codecs. However building it is a finicky and all the instructions are designed for VS2015 and command prompt for ARM processor, which does not exist for VS2017. I can’t find an updated version of the instructions (Left a message on their GIT site as well... no answers).
So my question is two-fold :
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Is there any way to download the missing/updated codecs to include them in my project that uses the standard UWP approach ?
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Is there an updated way/tutorial/instructions of building ffmpeginterop with VS2017 ?
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Is ffmpeginterop too old and I should not build using it going forward ?
Thanks !
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Convert Videos with FFMPEG to PowerPoint 2016 compatible video format [closed]
11 septembre 2020, par Sebastian S.I am trying to convert a bunch of videos to a video format that is natively supported by PowerPoint 2013/2016 on a Windows 7 system.


Microsoft recommends on their website mp4 with h264 and aac.


Video and audio file formats supported in PowerPoint




In PowerPoint 2013 and later, and in PowerPoint 2016 for Mac, for the best video playback experience, we recommend that you use .mp4 files encoded with H.264 video (a.k.a. MPEG-4 AVC) and AAC audio. In PowerPoint 2010, we recommend that you use .wmv files.






We recommend using .m4a files encoded with AAC audio. In PowerPoint 2010, we recommend that you use .wav or .wma files.




Audio is not important for me.
I tried to convert my videos with ffmpeg using the following options :


ffmpeg -i Input.avi -c:v libx264 -preset slow -crf 22 -c:a copy Output.mp4



However I cannot import the video to PowerPoint 2016 (32 or 64bit, I tried both). I always get a missing codec error.


PPT Error when including video files


Has anyone successfully encoded videos to a natively supported PowerPoint video format (on Windows) ?


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What H.264 encoding profile is considered "safe" in 2017 ?
12 avril 2017, par degenerateHave streaming services adopted a certain H.264 profile as "standard" or "safe" for use in 2017 ? For example are all modern Youtube videos at least "High" profile for H.264 ?
Or does Youtube continue to serve all encoding profiles, down to "Baseline" depending on hardware ?
I would like to start encoding my videos with "High" profile or higher, but cannot find any recent documentation on which profile is standard practice or safe to use.
Searching google is not fruitful :
Old blog post from 2008 :
http://blog.mediacoderhq.com/h264-profiles-and-levels/Old blog post from 2014 :
http://leightronix.com/blog/when-to-choose-high-main-and-baseline-while-encoding-h-264/I cannot find any updated 2017 information on this.