I'm currently using the chrome command-line-switches
--use-fake-device-for-media-stream
--use-file-for-fake-video-capture="file1.y4m"
--use-file-for-fake-audio-capture="file2.wav"
When I launch the following url https://appr.tc/?debug=loopback the audio is not synced correctly with the video.
Does anyone know why this might be the case?
Thanks!
the problem was with the https://appr.tc/?debug=loopback site. If you have a similar problem to mine use this site https://www.webrtc-experiment.com/RecordRTC/ instead.
Related
I have a html page with video tag,it work fine in every browser when use http,but if the website switch to https,the video can't play in iPhone safari browser, anyone ever seen this and know if there are ways around it? Thanks!
Check this link for the same question or this apple forum link if you have devkit.
You must have a valid Intermediate Certificate installed on the server. It is not enough to have only the server certificate installed.
The problem doesn't lie with the video, protocol, or the player. It has something to do with the SSL certificate. Have a look here - it describes a similar problem you're experiencing, but on the iPad.
I am using videojs to embed video on the following website: www.airfixthemovie.com. Html video has preload="none" which makes it a bit better. Any suggestion on how to make the video to work perfectly in Google Chrome? The trailer stops sometimes in Chrome and it looks like Chrome is loading or buffering. Thanks for your help.
From the network inspector it seems there's something wrong with the backend serving mp4 files. The requests are canceled and there are about 4 requests to the mp4 a second and the Content-Range header seems to throw completely random digits there.
I know this doesn't really answers your question but at least investigate the mp4 thing server side.
Is there any way via extension / hack / or otherwise to play an m3u8 video from google chrome? I'm having some trouble getting the official word on m3u8 support, though I'm pretty sure its unsupported.
I'm working on a video player with live playback (using flash for standard browser apps) so I'm using m3u8's to get everything working on mobile, but the debugging tools on mobile leave a lot to be desired. I was wondering if there was any workaround to getting these videos to work so I could use the browser debuggers. (I'm on windows 7).
There's a new appendBytes/sourceBuffer proposal in the spec, and I saw a chrome evangelist mention that there was a beta implementation in chrome canary. With that you would have to write a ton of javascript to read the m3u8 file, get the video segments, parse the data, and push them into the media element manually. I'm guessing that's more than you want to do for testing.
What you probably want is something like Weinre.
I'm having an issue with html5 video and safari 5. It works locally, the video pulls up and everything is fine. It will also pull up on the server if I go directly to the video path. Im just using the video tag and loading a video. It works on the server in all other browsers supporting html5 video. It works locally. It just doesn't work in safari on the server. In the network panel it shows the video trying to load but returns a null 404. The path to the video is relative. I'm very confused. Any help would be greatly appreciated. Thanks.
I had a problem very similar to yours. HTML5 video/Safari working locally but not when published on server. First check your .htaccess file. You may need to modify MIME types. Here is a very good tutorial: Dive into HTML5 Video.
Second, and this solved my problem, are you serving from a protected site? The solution for me was to move video and audio files to an unprotected folder and then use an absolute path to the specific media.
I was wondering how to embed a video on a webpage to have it compatible with mobile devices. I am kinda new to the whole mobileweb. So I set up some testing pages and tried them out with some devices of my friends. Flash is obviously not the way to go. Embed tag neither. html5 video tag neither. I also tried to nest them for fallback compatibility but just didn't get it right.
So I had a look at youtube. They are using rtsp streams and they just let the device handle the rtsp:// links. This seemed to be working everywhere, and I think they do it for a reason. So I had a look at rtsp protocol the possibilities to serve such a stream.
Turned out its really simple and doesn't really differ much from the http protocol. There is e.g. ffserver out there for that.
But every free/os implementation seems to be testing/buggy ...
So I ask you guys. I cant be the first stumbling across this problem.
Isn't there a nice tested way to embed videos with nice compatibility for mobile devices? preferably served from a http source!
looks like html5 is the way to go but important are the correct encoding settings.
h264, baseline 1.3 seems to work fine with iphone4 and android 2.1 ... rest untested.
I've been collection information about mobile compatible video players, you can find it here: http://blog.jsethi.com/media/html5-video-players/
The solution would be to use Kaltura open source platform. If you have have the knowledge to set it up it's the winning solution.
Here is my kaltura running HTML5 with flash fallback. http://cdpn.io/DeKuo
Read more here http://www.kaltura.org/
and here http://html5video.org/
Good Luck !