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  • 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 (...)

  • HTML5 audio and video support

    13 avril 2011, par

    MediaSPIP uses HTML5 video and audio tags to play multimedia files, taking advantage of the latest W3C innovations supported by modern browsers.
    The MediaSPIP player used has been created specifically for MediaSPIP and can be easily adapted to fit in with a specific theme.
    For older browsers the Flowplayer flash fallback is used.
    MediaSPIP allows for media playback on major mobile platforms with the above (...)

  • 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 (9727)

  • Automation for Downloading, Encoding, Renaming and Uploading [on hold]

    5 février 2019, par Madara Uchiha

    How do I automate - downloading anime episodes from Torrent > Encode the videos with ffmpeg or gui > rename (with encoder tag) > upload to Google drive ?
    Should work 24/7. Need help !

  • Compressing videos from a smartphone

    9 novembre 2016, par fejesjoco

    I have a Nexus 6p with the stock camera. It’s set to record at 1080p, 30fps. Here’s a 5 second sample (11 MB).

    Videos from this phone come out at about 17 Mbps on average. I tried to compress it with ffmpeg with -c:v libx264 -crf 23 -preset veryslow, the result comes out at about 5.5 MB, which is about 9 Mbps.

    I think this bitrate is a bit too much. When I look at torrent file listings, I can see high quality videos at 3 GB in size on average, and if such a movie is 90 minutes long on average, that is about 4-5 Mbps which sounds okay.

    I’m wondering, why the big difference ? I can notice that my video is noisy/grainy (which is expected from a phone), and that might reduce compressibility. I tried a few ffmpeg filters, like hqdn3d and atadenoise, but the noise mostly remained (maybe I didn’t play with it enough). Then I figured, the video is also shaky (which is also expected), and that might reduce compressibility too (and even makes temporal noise filtering less effective). I tried to stabilize it with the deshake filter, but that didn’t help either.

    I know I could just limit the bandwidth to whatever I like, but there must be a reason why ffmpeg thinks it needs a high bandwidth to maintain a certain quality, and a lower bandwidth would just decrease the quality.

    Why do these videos have such a high bitrate ? What’s the best way to compress them more while keeping or even increasing their quality ?

  • Have 2 blocking scripts interact with each other in linux

    18 novembre 2014, par Ortixx

    I have 2 blocking shell scripts which I want to have interact with each other. The scripts in question are peerflix (nodejs script) and ffmpeg (a simple bash script).

    What happens : Peerflix fires up, feeds data to ffmpeg bash scrip which terminates peerflix on completion.

    So once peerflix starts it outputs 2 lines and blocks immediately :

    [08:15 PM]-[vagrant@packer-virtualbox-iso]-[/var/www/test]-[git master]
    $ node /var/www/test/node/node_modules/peerflix/app.js /var/www/test/flexget/torrents/test.torrent -r -q
    listening: http://10.0.2.15:38339/
    process: 9601

    I have to feed the listening address to the ffmpeg bash script :

    #!/bin/sh
    ffmpeg -ss 00:05:00 -i {THE_LISTENING_PORT} -frames:v 1 out1.jpg
    ffmpeg -ss 00:10:00 -i {THE_LISTENING_PORT} -frames:v 1 out2.jpg

    After the bash script is done I have to kill the peerflix script (hence me outputting the PID).

    My question is how do I achieve this ?