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Autres articles (49)
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Gestion générale des documents
13 mai 2011, parMédiaSPIP ne modifie jamais le document original mis en ligne.
Pour chaque document mis en ligne il effectue deux opérations successives : la création d’une version supplémentaire qui peut être facilement consultée en ligne tout en laissant l’original téléchargeable dans le cas où le document original ne peut être lu dans un navigateur Internet ; la récupération des métadonnées du document original pour illustrer textuellement le fichier ;
Les tableaux ci-dessous expliquent ce que peut faire MédiaSPIP (...) -
Keeping control of your media in your hands
13 avril 2011, parThe vocabulary used on this site and around MediaSPIP in general, aims to avoid reference to Web 2.0 and the companies that profit from media-sharing.
While using MediaSPIP, you are invited to avoid using words like "Brand", "Cloud" and "Market".
MediaSPIP is designed to facilitate the sharing of creative media online, while allowing authors to retain complete control of their work.
MediaSPIP aims to be accessible to as many people as possible and development is based on expanding the (...) -
Des sites réalisés avec MediaSPIP
2 mai 2011, parCette page présente quelques-uns des sites fonctionnant sous MediaSPIP.
Vous pouvez bien entendu ajouter le votre grâce au formulaire en bas de page.
Sur d’autres sites (5677)
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Join us for the Piwik Community Meetup 2015 !
We’re excited to announce that our third Piwik Community Meetup will be held in Berlin on Tuesday, the 4th of August, 2015. Don’t miss this great opportunity to connect with other users and meet the core team behind Piwik. It’s free, so REGISTER TODAY ! And maybe you would like to share your Piwik use case ? We’re also waiting for your presentation ideas.
We will cover some of the upcoming features, discuss the future of Piwik, share tricks and hacks to help you get the most out of your Piwik platform, and socialise. If you use Piwik to improve your websites and apps, or are just generally curious about digital analytics and marketing – this event is not to be missed. As our core team is scattered all over the world, this will be a rare opportunity for you to meet and talk to us all at once – especially for those of you interested in the platform, integrating your app with Piwik, and building plugins.
After the official part, we would like to enjoy drinks with all the participants in the nearby bars. We hope you will be able to join us !
All Piwik community members are warmly invited to take part in the meetup !
Piwik Community Meetup 2015
When ?
Tuesday, the 4th of August, from 5-9pm
Where ?
Kulturbrauerei
Schönhauser Allee
Prenzlauer Berg area
Berlin, Germany
exact directions tbc.Languages :
English and German
Book tickets :
BOOK YOUR FREE INVITATION HERE
Open call for YOUR presentation ideas
We would also like to hear how you use Piwik – we’ll be delighted if you’d share your interesting use case during the Meetup. Please send your presentation ideas (speaking time : 5 to 7 minutes) to : meetup@piwik.pro ! Deadline : 20th of July 2015.
Contact the organisers :
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Join us for the Piwik Community Meetup 2015 !
We’re excited to announce that our third Piwik Community Meetup will be held in Berlin on Tuesday, the 4th of August, 2015. Don’t miss this great opportunity to connect with other users and meet the core team behind Piwik. It’s free, so REGISTER TODAY ! And maybe you would like to share your Piwik use case ? We’re also waiting for your presentation ideas.
We will cover some of the upcoming features, discuss the future of Piwik, share tricks and hacks to help you get the most out of your Piwik platform, and socialise. If you use Piwik to improve your websites and apps, or are just generally curious about digital analytics and marketing – this event is not to be missed. As our core team is scattered all over the world, this will be a rare opportunity for you to meet and talk to us all at once – especially for those of you interested in the platform, integrating your app with Piwik, and building plugins.
After the official part, we would like to enjoy drinks with all the participants in the nearby bars. We hope you will be able to join us !
All Piwik community members are warmly invited to take part in the meetup !
Piwik Community Meetup 2015
When ?
Tuesday, the 4th of August, from 5-9pm
Where ?
Kulturbrauerei
Schönhauser Allee
Prenzlauer Berg area
Berlin, Germany
exact directions tbc.Languages :
English and German
Book tickets :
BOOK YOUR FREE INVITATION HERE
Open call for YOUR presentation ideas
We would also like to hear how you use Piwik – we’ll be delighted if you’d share your interesting use case during the Meetup. Please send your presentation ideas (speaking time : 5 to 7 minutes) to : meetup@piwik.pro ! Deadline : 20th of July 2015.
Contact the organisers :
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Is there a way to use ffmpeg audio filters to automatically synchronize 2 streams with similar content
29 mai 2015, par user3741412I have a situation where I have a video capture of HD content via HDMI with audio from a sound board that goes through a impedance drop into a microphone input of a camcorder. That same signal is split at line level to a ’line in’ jack on the same computer that is capturing the HDMI. Alternatively I can capture the audio via USB from the soundboard which is probably the best plan, but carries with it the same issue.
The point is that the line in or usb capture will be much higher quality than the one on HDMI because the line out -> impedance change -> mic in path generates inferior quality in that simply brushing the mic jack on the camera while trying to change the zoom (close proximity) can cause noise on the recording.
So I can do this today :
- Take the good sound and the camera captured sound and load each into
audacity and pretty quickly use the timeshift toot to perfectly fit
the good audio to the questionable audio from the HDMI capture and
cut the good audio to the exact size of the video. Then I can use
ffmpeg or other video editing software to replace the questionable
audio with the better audio.
But while somewhat quick and easy, it always carries with it a bit of human error and time. I’d like to automate this if possible as this process is repeated at least weekly throughout the year.
Does anyone have a suggestion if any of these ideas have merit or could suggest another approach ?
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I suspect but have yet to confirm that the system timestamp of the start time may be recorded in both audio captured with something like Audacity, or the USB capture tool from the sound board as well as the HDMI mpeg-2 video. I tried ffprobe on a couple audacity captured .wav files but didn’t see anything in the results about such a time code, but perhaps other audio formats or other probing tools may include this info. Can anyone advise if this is common with any particular capture tools or file formats ?
- if so, I think I could get best results by extracting this information and then using simple adelay and atrim filters in ffmpeg to sync reliably directly from the two sources in one ffmpeg call. This is all theoretical for me right now— I’ve never tried either of these filters yet— just trying to optimize against blind alleys by asking for advice up front.
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If such timestamps are not embedded, possibly I can use the file system timestamp for the same idea expressed in 1a, but I suspect the file open of the two capture tools may have different inherant delays. Possibly these delays will be found to be nearly constant and the approach can work with a built-in constant anticipation delay but sounds messy and less reliable than idea 1. Still, I’d take it, if it turns out reasonably reliable
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Are there any ffmpeg or general digital audio experts out there that know of particular filters that can be employed on the actual data to look for similarities like normalizing the peak amplitudes or normalizing the amplification of the two to some RMS value and then stepping through a short 10 second snippet of audio, moving one time stream .01s left against the other repeatedly and subtracting the two and looking for a minimum ? Sounds like it could take a while, but if it could do this in less than a minute and be reliable, I suspect it could work. But I have only rudimentary knowledge of audio streams and perhaps what I suggest is just not plausible— but since each stream starts with the same source I think there should be a chance. I am just way out of my depth as to how to go down this road, so if someone out there knows such magic or can throw me some names of filters and example calls, I can explore if I can make it work.
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any hardware level suggestions to take a line level output down to a mic level input and not have the problems I am seeing using a simple in-line impedance drop module, so that I can simply rely on the audio from the HDMI ?
Thanks in advance for any pointers or suggestinons !
- Take the good sound and the camera captured sound and load each into