OGGSLIDESHOW(1) | User Manuals | OGGSLIDESHOW(1) |
oggSlideshow - creates slideshows from pictures
oggSlideshow [options] picture1 [ picture2 [...] ]
oggSlideshow creates a theora video from a number of pictures in JPEG‐ or PNG‐format with different visual effects.
Example: -s 320x240
Example: -f 16
Example: -o myShow.ogv
Example: -l 10
Example: -d 1024000
kb:
Ken Burns effect (default)
cf:
Picture crossfade for changeover
p:
Plain picture presentation
bl:
Bluring at changeover
Example: -t p
Example: -e
To understand this option you need some more internal information: The picture is loaded by the gd lib. So the transformation from png or jpeg to a plain RGBA is done here. The second reason for using gd is the great resizing facilities as pictures are often much bigger than the video frame. OggSlideshow can handle pictures from 0.5 to 2 times of the video frame width and height best, as it uses a linear pixel interpolation. With the resizing feature of gd, oggSlideshow reads pictures with a size "near" to the video output size and can then operate with that picture. This produces a very good quality output, as you can see above.
The value given with this option is the factor the picture is read in in respect of the video frame size. When the video frame size is 320x240 and the resample factor is 1.2 than the picture that is read is resized to 384x288. Specially for the ken burns effect this is important as the sliding is done on a picture bigger than the video frame size.
oggSlideshow -l3 -tp -d1024000 -s480x320 -o demo-plain.ogv <picture1.jpg> <picture2.jpg> ...
Joern Seger <yorn at gmx dot net>
oggCut(1), oggCat(1), oggJoin(1), oggSplit(1), oggTranscode(1), oggThumb(1), oggSilence(1)
JAN 2010 | Linux |