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Autres articles (42)
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Qu’est ce qu’un masque de formulaire
13 juin 2013, parUn masque de formulaire consiste en la personnalisation du formulaire de mise en ligne des médias, rubriques, actualités, éditoriaux et liens vers des sites.
Chaque formulaire de publication d’objet peut donc être personnalisé.
Pour accéder à la personnalisation des champs de formulaires, il est nécessaire d’aller dans l’administration de votre MediaSPIP puis de sélectionner "Configuration des masques de formulaires".
Sélectionnez ensuite le formulaire à modifier en cliquant sur sont type d’objet. (...) -
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 -
Les formats acceptés
28 janvier 2010, parLes commandes suivantes permettent d’avoir des informations sur les formats et codecs gérés par l’installation local de ffmpeg :
ffmpeg -codecs ffmpeg -formats
Les format videos acceptés en entrée
Cette liste est non exhaustive, elle met en exergue les principaux formats utilisés : h264 : H.264 / AVC / MPEG-4 AVC / MPEG-4 part 10 m4v : raw MPEG-4 video format flv : Flash Video (FLV) / Sorenson Spark / Sorenson H.263 Theora wmv :
Les formats vidéos de sortie possibles
Dans un premier temps on (...)
Sur d’autres sites (4570)
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Interfacing to an Xbox Optical Drive
1er octobre 2013, par Multimedia Mike — xboxThe next generation Xbox is going to hit the streets soon. But for some reason, I’m still interested in the previous generation’s unit (i.e., the original Xbox). Specifically, I’ve always wondered if it’s possible to use the original Xbox’s optical drive in order to read Xbox discs from Linux. I was never curious enough to actually buy an Xbox just to find out but I eventually came across a cast-off console on a recycle pile.
I have long known that the Xbox has what appears to be a more or less standard optical drive with a 40-pin IDE connector. The only difference is the power adapter which I surmise is probably the easiest way to turn a bit of standardized hardware into a bit of proprietary hardware. The IDE and power connectors look like this :
Thus, I wanted to try opening an Xbox and plugging the optical drive into a regular PC, albeit one that supports IDE cables, and allow the Xbox to supply power to the drive. Do you still have hardware laying around that has 40-pin IDE connectors ? I guess my Mac Mini PPC fits the bill, but I’ll be darned if I’m going to pry that thing open again. I have another IDE-capable machine buried in my closet, last called into service when I needed a computer with a native RS-232 port 3 years ago. The ordeal surrounding making this old computer useful right now can be another post entirely.
Here’s what the monstrosity looks like thanks to characteristically short IDE cable lengths :
Process :
- Turn on Xbox first
- Turn on PC
Doing these things in the opposite order won’t work since the kernel really wants to see the drive when booting up. Inspecting the
'dmesg'
log afterward reveals interesting items :<br />
hdd: PHILIPS XBOX DVD DRIVE, ATAPI CD/DVD-ROM drive<br />
hdd: host max PIO5 wanted PIO255(auto-tune) selected PIO4<br />
hdd: UDMA/33 mode selected<br />
[...]<br />
hdd: ATAPI DVD-ROM drive, 128kB Cache<br />Why is that interesting ? When is the last time to saw disk devices prefixed by ‘hd’ rather than ‘sd’ ? Blast from the past. Oh, and the optical drive’s vendor string clearly indicates that this is an Xbox drive saying ‘hi !’.
Time To Read
When I first studied an Xbox disc in a normal optical drive, I noticed that I was able to read 6992 2048-byte sectors — about 14 MB of data — as reported by the disc table of contents (TOC). This is just enough data to play a standard DVD video animation that kindly instructs the viewer to please use a proper Xbox. At this point, I estimated that there must be something special about Xbox optical drive firmware that knows how to read alternate information on these discs and access further sectors.I ran my TOC query tool with an Xbox Magazine demo disc in the optical drive and it reported substantially more than 6992 sectors, enough to account for more than 2 GB of data. That’s promising. I then tried running
'dd'
against the device and it was able to read… about 14 MB, an exact quantity of bytes that, when divided by 2048 bytes/sector, yields 6992 sectors.Future (Past ?) Work
Assuming Google is your primary window into the broader internet, the world is beginning to lose its memory of things pertaining to the original Xbox (Microsoft’s naming scheme certainly doesn’t help searches). What I’m saying is that it can be difficult to find information about this stuff now. However, I was able to learn that a host needs to perform a sort of cryptographic handshake with the drive at the SCSI level before it is allowed to access the forbidden areas of the disc. I think. I’m still investigating this and will hopefully post more soon. -
android ffmpeg halfninja Could not find input stream matching output stream
2 octobre 2013, par NguyenI need your help about Android FFMPEG .
I tried to run halfninja's projectTest but some errors are occurred.
First error is occurred and it has been fixed by following suggestion : android ffmpeg halfninja av_open_input_file returns -2 (no such file or directory)
Then after run again, I have this error :
10-03 00:38:48.070 : E/Videokit(10474) : Could not find input stream matching output stream #0.0
Full error :
10-03 00:38:47.340 : E/Videokit(10474) : ffmpeg version N-30996-gf925b24, Copyright (c) 2000-2011 the FFmpeg developers
10-03 00:38:47.340 : E/Videokit(10474) : built on Oct 2 2013 10:32:27 with gcc 4.4.3
10-03 00:38:47.340 : E/Videokit(10474) : configuration : —enable-cross-compile —arch=arm5te —enable-armv5te —target-os=linux —disable-stripping —prefix=../output —disable-neon —enable-version3 —disable-shared —enable-static —enable-gpl —enable-memalign-hack —cc=arm-linux-androideabi-gcc —ld=arm-linux-androideabi-ld —extra-cflags='-fPIC -DANDROID -D_thumb_ -mthumb -Wfatal-errors -Wno-deprecated' —disable-everything —enable-decoder=mjpeg —enable-demuxer=mjpeg —enable-parser=mjpeg —enable-demuxer=image2 —enable-muxer=mp4 —enable-encoder=libx264 —enable-libx264 —enable-decoder=rawvideo —enable-protocol=file —enable-hwaccels —disable-ffmpeg —disable-ffplay —disable-ffprobe —disable-ffserver —disable-network —enable-filter=buffer —enable-filter=buffersink —disable-demuxer=v4l —disable-demuxer=v4l2 —disable-indev=v4l —disable-indev=v4l2 —extra-cflags='-I../x264 -Ivideokit' —extra-ldflags=-L../x264
10-03 00:38:48.070 : E/Videokit(10474) : Could not find input stream matching output stream #0.0
10-03 00:38:48.070 : E/Videokit(10474) : ffmpeg_exit(1) called !please help me.Thanks so much
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Error LIBSWRESAMPLE_0 Compiling ffmpeg Kubuntu 12.04
30 septembre 2013, par lobo115i try to compile ffmpeg in ubuntu 12.04 with this tuto But i had a error with a library so i use this to solve it :
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get -y install build-essential checkinstall git libfaac-dev libgpac-dev \
libjack-jackd2-dev libmp3lame-dev libopencore-amrnb-dev libopencore-amrwb-dev \
libsdl1.2-dev libtheora-dev libva-dev libvdpau-dev libvorbis-dev libx11-dev \
libxfixes-dev texi2html yasm zlib1g-devand this
cd
git clone git://git.videolan.org/x264
cd x264
./configure --enable-static
make
sudo checkinstall --pkgname=x264 --pkgversion="3:$(./version.sh | \
awk -F'[" ]' '/POINT/{print $4"+git"$5}')" --backup=no --deldoc=yes \
--fstrans=no --defaultthen i have a problem with another library so i use a apt-get install to add libgsm1-dev, then i could install it, but now when i tried to execute it said :
ffmpeg: relocation error: /usr/local/lib/libavfilter.so.3: symbol swr_get_class, version LIBSWRESAMPLE_0 not defined in file libswresample.so.0 with link time reference
So i look for help, and tried
export LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/usr/local/lib
sudo ldconfig -vbut it didn't work, could you help me ?
ThzPS:When i tried to install WINFF with synaptic or apt-get it said that it will install ffmpeg.