good day friends, pls creating a file for image, is it the same for mp4 videos. because I created a folder to enable hold my video to display when rendered in my website(locally). but not working.
I created a folder and save the mp4 video their and use video tag to call it from my html,but not working.
I'm gonna enable a video on Azure Wiki page. This video is not public, so I have attached it to Azure Wiki page like a image and the file was uploaded to /.attachments/ folder. Is it possible to use it during creating a vide section?
I have tried the following options but it now working as expected - it looks, the source was not recognized (Unable to play video)
::: video
/.attachments/2022-08-03-13-58-19-ase-e9465a68-acd2-4f73-b11a-5cc52c96d8c5.mp4
:::
<video src="/.attachments/2022-08-03-13-58-19-ase-e9465a68-acd2-4f73-b11a-5cc52c96d8c5.mp4" width=400 controls></video>
You can treat the video as any other Wiki attachment like this:
[2022-08-03-13-58-19-ase-e9465a68-acd2-4f73-b11a-5cc52c96d8c5.mp4](/.attachments/2022-08-03-13-58-19-ase-e9465a68-acd2-4f73-b11a-5cc52c96d8c5.mp4)
However, it's conceivable you may loose some of the intended video functionality when you treat it as an attachment.
I want to use VideoJS in my project, and I also need closed-caption support. I have read the VideoJS docs on how to use a text-track from a WebVTT file, but most of my .mp4 files have captions embedded in the file itself, there is no WebVTT file available. How can I get the captions out of the mp4 using VideoJS?
Edit: We will be live-streaming video, which is why the closed-captions are embedded into a stream.
To do the extraction step, you don't/can't use VideoJS itself. Instead, there are various standalone video editors that can do the job...just do a google-search like 'video tools to extract sub-titles'. Preferably, find/use a tool that extracts subtitles/captions into an "SRT" file-type. Then, to convert into VTT files, there are various tools for that, too. [ For that step,I use the free SRT->VTT converter avail at: http://atelier.u-sub.net/srt2vtt ]
I tried to use a url (like http://www.example.com/dbname.nsf/notesunid/$File/filename.mp3) to play a sound attachment from Notes document on Domino server 9.0.2. I hope it can play directly by streaming but it always download the file. Any suggestion?
You should be able to use HTML5 Audio for this. Here's a simple example:
<audio src="/dbname.nsf/notesunid/$File/filename.mp3" controls></audio>
So I have a youtube page open where I can watch a video.
But this video was taken down by the user. My open page still has the video, if you go to it again (refresh) the new page does not.
Since I have the video loaded in my browser tab (chrome), how can I go about finding the actual file and saving it?
In the old days of YouTube, it may have been possible to find the single video file on your harddrive and save it, but this is no longer the case. As explained in this Computerphile video, all YouTube videos are now split into tiny pieces and downloaded piece by piece.
You can observe this for yourself if you open up Chrome (or Firefox's) Dev Tools and watch the nnetwork tab. You'll see:
all of the pieces of the video loading bit by bit.
One additional thing you'll learn from the Network tab is that the videos are downloaded as octet streams, so you won't be able to find the links to the pieces hidden in the DOM.
One thing you migth try is, in the Network tab, clear the results and then move the cursor to the beginning of the video. You should see the streams come up again. Right click on the path name and then do a "save as", and save it as 0000.mp4 (or whatever), for all the pieces. You should be able to reassemble these pieces in any video editing software. I tested this by getting two pieces from a random YouTube video.
I couldn't find anything that doesn't require a restart (and hence reload) of Chrome.
One (kludgy) hack if possible, though, would be to run a screen video capture and play the video.
I have done this long back using IE6, i.e. fetch the file from the temporary files location and rename it to the extension flv.
The following links should point you in the right direction, but can't say it will work for sure, as I believe recent chrome versions seem to have a defensive cache implementation.
Ubuntu Forum solutions
You might need to tweak the above for your use.
Run a screen recording/capture program such as:
Screenr
CamStudio
Then edit out the youtube bar if its visible.
The buffered video is cached at the following location:
C:\Users\<user name>\AppData\Local\Temp\flaxxxx.tmp
Note you have to change to whatever user you are using, and xxxx is a random number. Also, the .tmp file might be hidden, so make sure your windows explorer is displaying the hidden files.
While the tab is open, you won't be able to copy the file, but if you close it, the file will be automatically deleted. For doing so, download HoboCopy, extract it and after that, run cmd as administrator. Change the directory on the console to the directory where you have extracted HoboCopy and type the following command:
hobocopy C:\users\<user name>\Appdata\Local\Temp C:\videos fla1234.tmp
<user name> - replace with your windows username
C:\videos - the directory where you want the video to be copied to
fla1234.tmp - the name of the file to be copied.
Wait for the copy to be done and then you can rename the destination file, changing '.tmp' to '.flv'. This file can be played with any FLV supporting media player.
i find this software to get the video from temp files folder and play it http://www.nirsoft.net/utils/video_cache_view.html
Video file is cached, therefore suggested ways can help you to save the file. But if you deal with same problems I offer using IDM(Internet Download Manager). After installation of this application for every online video stream (e.g. all flv files in youtube) IDM brings a small picture that you can click on it and downloading will be started automatically without need of any configuration.
You have to install a browser extension to download YouTube videos. You won't find a simple URL for an mp4 file in the HTML source. Try googling "youtube downloader" + your browser name.
As far as I recall, YouTube videos are not served as a continuous HTTP resource, but instead divided into small chunks and assembled client-side by the Flash player. This is why you can jump into the middle of a video, without having to buffer the first half of the video.
Generally speaking, YouTube don't want you to rip their content, so they aren't exactly making it easy for downloaders.