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Médias (39)
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Stereo master soundtrack
17 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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ED-ME-5 1-DVD
11 octobre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Octobre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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1,000,000
27 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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Demon Seed
26 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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The Four of Us are Dying
26 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
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Corona Radiata
26 septembre 2011, par
Mis à jour : Septembre 2011
Langue : English
Type : Audio
Autres articles (51)
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Modifier la date de publication
21 juin 2013, parComment changer la date de publication d’un média ?
Il faut au préalable rajouter un champ "Date de publication" dans le masque de formulaire adéquat :
Administrer > Configuration des masques de formulaires > Sélectionner "Un média"
Dans la rubrique "Champs à ajouter, cocher "Date de publication "
Cliquer en bas de la page sur Enregistrer -
Les autorisations surchargées par les plugins
27 avril 2010, parMediaspip core
autoriser_auteur_modifier() afin que les visiteurs soient capables de modifier leurs informations sur la page d’auteurs -
Pas question de marché, de cloud etc...
10 avril 2011Le vocabulaire utilisé sur ce site essaie d’éviter toute référence à la mode qui fleurit allègrement
sur le web 2.0 et dans les entreprises qui en vivent.
Vous êtes donc invité à bannir l’utilisation des termes "Brand", "Cloud", "Marché" etc...
Notre motivation est avant tout de créer un outil simple, accessible à pour tout le monde, favorisant
le partage de créations sur Internet et permettant aux auteurs de garder une autonomie optimale.
Aucun "contrat Gold ou Premium" n’est donc prévu, aucun (...)
Sur d’autres sites (4376)
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Anomalie #4189 (Fermé) : extraire_multi mélange un /li /ul final avec le de langue ajouté p...
8 mars 2021, par cedric -intégré par https://git.spip.net/spip/spip/commit/2731ba05209cf61588923a5cd8cc4442cad6878e alea jacta est
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When compressing a set of images with libx264, why does frame rate affect final output size ?
3 avril 2018, par jd20I’m using ffmpeg to encode a set of images as a short timelapse video, using libx264 codec. My first attempt, I encoded it at 30 FPS, using :
ffmpeg -r 30 -pattern_type glob -i "*.jpg" -vcodec libx264 -crf 30 -pix_fmt yuv420p output.mp4
With 60 frames, that gives me a 163 KB file that’s 2 seconds long. Then I realized I needed it to be slower, so I re-ran the same command, but changed -r to 2. Now I have a file that’s 30 seconds long, but the size jumped to 891 KB ! The video quality looks perceptually the same.
How do I encode at a slower frame rate, without the final file size ballooning ?
Notes : Some theories I had, and things I checked. First, to make sure ffmpeg wasn’t duplicating frames in the longer verison, I check the I/P/B counts. The 30 FPS file had :
[libx264 @ 0x7f9b26001c00] frame I:1 Avg QP:30.67 size: 44649
[libx264 @ 0x7f9b26001c00] frame P:15 Avg QP:31.19 size: 5471
[libx264 @ 0x7f9b26001c00] frame B:44 Avg QP:31.45 size: 767The 2 FPS file had :
[libx264 @ 0x7fcd32842200] frame I:1 Avg QP:21.29 size: 90138
[libx264 @ 0x7fcd32842200] frame P:15 Avg QP:22.48 size: 33686
[libx264 @ 0x7fcd32842200] frame B:44 Avg QP:26.29 size: 6674So, the I/P/B counts are identical, but the QP is much lower for the 2 FPS file. To offset, I tried increasing -crf for the 2 FPS file, to get about the same target size, but that just gave me a very blurry video (had to go to crf=40). I tried messing with -minrate, -maxrate, -bt, none helped. I’m guessing there is some x264 codec setting which is frame rate dependent, but I’m at a loss trying to figure out which one (from what I understand, constant bitrate is affected by frame rate but CRF should not be, but maybe I’m misunderstanding it.
-
When compressing a set of images with libx264, why does frame rate affect final output size ?
3 avril 2018, par jd20I’m using ffmpeg to encode a set of images as a short timelapse video, using libx264 codec. My first attempt, I encoded it at 30 FPS, using :
ffmpeg -r 30 -pattern_type glob -i "*.jpg" -vcodec libx264 -crf 30 -pix_fmt yuv420p output.mp4
With 60 frames, that gives me a 163 KB file that’s 2 seconds long. Then I realized I needed it to be slower, so I re-ran the same command, but changed -r to 2. Now I have a file that’s 30 seconds long, but the size jumped to 891 KB ! The video quality looks perceptually the same.
How do I encode at a slower frame rate, without the final file size ballooning ?
Notes : Some theories I had, and things I checked. First, to make sure ffmpeg wasn’t duplicating frames in the longer verison, I check the I/P/B counts. The 30 FPS file had :
[libx264 @ 0x7f9b26001c00] frame I:1 Avg QP:30.67 size: 44649
[libx264 @ 0x7f9b26001c00] frame P:15 Avg QP:31.19 size: 5471
[libx264 @ 0x7f9b26001c00] frame B:44 Avg QP:31.45 size: 767The 2 FPS file had :
[libx264 @ 0x7fcd32842200] frame I:1 Avg QP:21.29 size: 90138
[libx264 @ 0x7fcd32842200] frame P:15 Avg QP:22.48 size: 33686
[libx264 @ 0x7fcd32842200] frame B:44 Avg QP:26.29 size: 6674So, the I/P/B counts are identical, but the QP is much lower for the 2 FPS file. To offset, I tried increasing -crf for the 2 FPS file, to get about the same target size, but that just gave me a very blurry video (had to go to crf=40). I tried messing with -minrate, -maxrate, -bt, none helped. I’m guessing there is some x264 codec setting which is frame rate dependent, but I’m at a loss trying to figure out which one (from what I understand, constant bitrate is affected by frame rate but CRF should not be, but maybe I’m misunderstanding it.