Recherche avancée

Médias (1)

Mot : - Tags -/pirate bay

Autres articles (64)

  • Mise à jour de la version 0.1 vers 0.2

    24 juin 2013, par

    Explications des différents changements notables lors du passage de la version 0.1 de MediaSPIP à la version 0.3. Quelles sont les nouveautés
    Au niveau des dépendances logicielles Utilisation des dernières versions de FFMpeg (>= v1.2.1) ; Installation des dépendances pour Smush ; Installation de MediaInfo et FFprobe pour la récupération des métadonnées ; On n’utilise plus ffmpeg2theora ; On n’installe plus flvtool2 au profit de flvtool++ ; On n’installe plus ffmpeg-php qui n’est plus maintenu au (...)

  • Personnaliser en ajoutant son logo, sa bannière ou son image de fond

    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 ;

  • Participer à sa traduction

    10 avril 2011

    Vous pouvez nous aider à améliorer les locutions utilisées dans le logiciel ou à traduire celui-ci dans n’importe qu’elle nouvelle langue permettant sa diffusion à de nouvelles communautés linguistiques.
    Pour ce faire, on utilise l’interface de traduction de SPIP où l’ensemble des modules de langue de MediaSPIP sont à disposition. ll vous suffit de vous inscrire sur la liste de discussion des traducteurs pour demander plus d’informations.
    Actuellement MediaSPIP n’est disponible qu’en français et (...)

Sur d’autres sites (8844)

  • Pass a process to a subclass

    16 décembre 2014, par Brett

    I would like to pass a process to a subclass so I may kill it but I can’t figure out how to pass the process. I’m unsure how to store it so I can return it to the form and be able to call the subclass method to kill it. here are my classes

    package my.mashformcnts;
    import java.io.IOException;
    import java.util.Scanner;
    import java.util.regex.Pattern;


    /**
    *
    * @author brett
    */
    public class MashRocks {

       public static Process startThread(MashFormCnts mashFormCnts) throws IOException {
           ProcessBuilder pb = new ProcessBuilder("ffmpeg", "-i", "C:\\Users\\brett\\Documents\\Telegraph_Road.mp4", "C:\\Users\\brett\\Documents\\out.mp4");

           //Here is where i would like to name and store the Process


           final Process p = pb.start();
           // create a new thread to get progress from ffmpeg command , override  
           // it's run method, and start it!  
           Thread t = new Thread() {
               @Override
               public void run() {
                   Scanner sc = new Scanner(p.getErrorStream());
                   // Find duration  
                   Pattern durPattern = Pattern.compile("(?<=Duration: )[^,]*");
                   String dur = sc.findWithinHorizon(durPattern, 0);
                   if (dur == null) {
                       throw new RuntimeException("Could not parse duration.");
                   }
                   String[] hms = dur.split(":");
                   double totalSecs = Integer.parseInt(hms[0]) * 3600 + Integer.parseInt(hms[1]) * 60 + Double.parseDouble(hms[2]);
                   System.out.println("Total duration: " + totalSecs + " seconds.");
                   // Find time as long as possible.  
                   Pattern timePattern = Pattern.compile("(?<=time=)[\\d:.]*");
                   String match;
                   String[] matchSplit;
                   //MashForm pgbar = new MashForm();
                   while (null != (match = sc.findWithinHorizon(timePattern, 0))) {
                       matchSplit = match.split(":");
                       double progress = (Integer.parseInt(matchSplit[0]) * 3600 + Integer.parseInt(matchSplit[1]) * 60 + Double.parseDouble(matchSplit[2])) / totalSecs;
                       int prog = (int) (progress * 100);
                       mashFormCunts.setbar(prog);
                   }
               }
           };
          t.start();
          return p;
       }
      public synchronized static void stop(Thread t) throws IOException{
              Runtime.getRuntime().exec("taskkill /F /IM ffmpeg.exe");  
               t = null;
             //t.interrupt();



      }
    }
      class killMash extends MashRocks{
       public static void Kfpeg(Process p){

         p.destroyForcibly();
       }
    }

    So those are my classes. I’m very new.

    Next there is the event Listener on the form, so when I click this I want to kill the ffmpeg proecess with the Thread t :

     private void jButton2ActionPerformed(java.awt.event.ActionEvent evt) {                                        
           // TODO add your handling code here:
           Thread n = Thread.currentThread();
           System.out.print(n);
           try {
               //MashRocks.stop(n);
                //This isnt working but i think its closer
                killMash.Kfpeg(MashRocks.startThread(this));
    //Not Sure what to do here
     //here is where i want to pass the process sorry for the typo
     killMash.kfpeg(p);
               } catch (IOException ex) {
                   Logger.getLogger(MashFormCunts.class.getName()).log(Level.SEVERE, null, ex);
               }

           }  

    Any help is awesome cheers

  • How Much H.264 In Each Encoder ?

    8 septembre 2010, par Multimedia Mike — General

    Thanks to my recent experiments with code coverage tools, I have a powerful new — admittedly somewhat specious — method of comparing programs. For example, I am certain that I have read on more than one occasion that Apple’s H.264 encoder sucks compared to x264 due, at least in part, to the Apple encoder’s alleged inability to exercise all of H.264′s features. I wonder how to test that claim ?

    Experiment
    Use code coverage tools to determine which H.264 encoder uses the most features.

    Assumptions

    • Movie trailers hosted by Apple will all be encoded with the same settings using Apple’s encoder.
    • Similarly, Yahoo’s movie trailers will be encoded with consistent settings using an unknown encoder.
    • Encoding a video using FFmpeg’s libx264-slow setting will necessarily throw a bunch of H.264′s features into the mix (I really don’t think this assumption holds much water, but I also don’t know what “standard” x264 settings are).

    Methodology

    • Grab a random Apple-hosted 1080p movie trailer and random Yahoo-hosted 1080p movie trailer from Dave’s Trailer Page.
    • Use libx264/FFmpeg with the ‘slow’ preset to encode Big Buck Bunny 1080p from raw PNG files.
    • Build FFmpeg with code coverage enabled.
    • Decode each file to raw YUV, ignore audio decoding, generate code coverage statistics using gcovr, reset stats after each run by deleting *.gcda files.

    Results

    • x264 1080p video : 9968 / 134203 lines
    • Apple 1080p trailer : 9968 / 134203 lines
    • Yahoo 1080p trailer : 9914 / 134203 lines

    I also ran this old x264-encoded file (ImperishableNightStage6Low.mp4) through the same test. It demonstrated the most code coverage with 10671 / 134203 lines.

    Conclusions
    Conclusions ? Ha ! Go ahead and jump all over this test. I’m already fairly confident that it’s impossible (or maybe just very difficult) to build a single H.264-encoded video that exercises every feature that FFmpeg’s decoder supports. For example, is it possible for a file to use both CABAC and CAVLC entropy methods ? If it’s possible, does any current encoder do that ?

  • Optical Drive Value Proposition

    28 août 2010, par Multimedia Mike — General

    I have the absolute worst luck in the optical drive department. Ever since I started building my own computers in 1995 — close to the beginning of the CD-ROM epoch — I have burned through a staggering number of optical drives. Seriously, especially in the time period between about 1995-1998, I was going through a new drive every 4-6 months or so. This was also during that CD-ROM speed race where the the drive packages kept advertising loftier ‘X’ speed ratings. I didn’t play a lot of CD-ROM games during that timeframe, though I did listen to quite a few audio CDs through the computer.



    I use “optical drive” as a general term to describe CD-ROM drives, CD-R/RW drives, DVD-ROM drives, DVD-R/RW drives, and drives capable of doing any combination of reading and writing CDs and DVDs. In my observation, optical media seems to be falling out of favor somewhat, giving way to online digital distribution for things like games and software, as well as flash drives and external hard drives vs. recordable or rewritable media for backup and sneakernet duty. Somewhere along the line, I started to buy computers that didn’t even have optical drives. That’s why I have purchased at least 2 external USB drives (seen in the picture above). I don’t have much confidence that either works correctly. My main desktop until recently, a Mac Mini, has an internal optical drive that grew flaky and unreliable a few months after the unit was purchased.

    I just have really rotten luck with optical drives. The most reliable drive in my house is the one on the headless machine that, until recently, was the main workhorse on the FATE farm. The eject switch didn’t work correctly so I have to log in remotely, 'sudo eject', walk to the other room, pop in the disc, walk back to the other room, and work with the disc.

    Maybe optical media is on its way out, but I still have many hundreds of CD-ROMs. Perhaps I should move forward on this brainstorm to archive all of my optical discs on hard drives (and then think of some data mining experiments, just for the academic appeal), before it’s too late ; optical discs don’t last forever.

    So if I needed a good optical drive, what should I consider ? I’ve always been the type to go cheap, I admit. Many of my optical drives were on the lower end of the cost spectrum, which might have played some role in their rapid replacement. However, I’m not sold on the idea that I’m getting quality just because I’m paying a higher price. That LG unit at the top of the pile up there was relatively pricey and still didn’t fare well in the long (or even medium) term.

    Come to think of it, I used to have a ridiculous stockpile of castoff (but somehow still functional) optical drives. So many, in fact, that in 2004 I had a full size PC tower that I filled with 4 working drives, just because I could. Okay, I admit that there was a period where I had some reliable drives.

    That might be an idea, actually– throw together such a computer for heavy duty archival purposes. I visited Weird Stuff Warehouse today (needed some PC100 RAM for an old machine and they came through) and I think I could put together such a box rather cheaply.

    It’s a dirty job, but… well, you know the rest.