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Re: Where to put media demonstrating Gnu Elpa packages?
From: |
Jean Louis |
Subject: |
Re: Where to put media demonstrating Gnu Elpa packages? |
Date: |
Mon, 29 Jul 2019 19:04:18 +0200 |
User-agent: |
Mutt/1.10.1 (2018-07-13) |
* Michael Heerdegen <michael_heerdegen@web.de> [2019-07-29 03:40]:
> Stefan Monnier <monnier@iro.umontreal.ca> writes:
>
> > I think MediaGoblin is part of the answer, so I think all you need is
> > to find the FSF's MediaGoblin instance.
>
> I went with https://goblinrefuge.com. It's a disaster. My first video
> I uploaded took ~ 12 hours to appear. It had 350kB. You get no
> feedback, no failure message, no meaningful info about transcoding
> progress, etc. My second video was a bit larger, 12.5MB - I wait for it
> to appear since four days.
>
> The 350k video was a demonstration of an Emacs bug. I posted it as an
> attachment in an answer to the bug report - nobody complained. Is such
> a size acceptable to attach?
>
> FWIW I'll try PeerTube now which had also been suggested in this
> thread.
It could be simple. Just find ANY hosting account and upload video,
and provide link to it.
I use following bash function to convert video to webm:
function video2webm () {
bitrate=$1;
shift;
for file in "$@";
do out=${file%.*}.webm;
ffmpeg -y -i "$file" -c:v libvpx-vp9 -b:v $bitrate -pass 1 -speed 4 -c:a
libopus -f webm /dev/null -async 1 -vsync passthrough && \
ffmpeg -i "$file" -c:v libvpx-vp9 -b:v $bitrate -pass 2 -speed 1
-c:a libopus "$out" -async 1 -vsync passthrough;
done;
}
then I do like:
video2webm 300k video.mp4
so this way I get smaller video when necessary.
Jean