- From: Davidlee <dlwillson@gmail.com>
- Date: Fri, 10 Sep 2010 11:30:01 -0400
If I understand correctly... I think we would be using this a lot in transmedia integration for film/tv. On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 10:53 AM, Tab Atkins Jr. <jackalmage at gmail.com>wrote: > On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 4:05 AM, Silvia Pfeiffer > <silviapfeiffer1 at gmail.com> wrote: > > On Fri, Sep 10, 2010 at 7:28 PM, Biju <bijumaillist at gmail.com> wrote: > >> > >> https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=571822 > >> > Firefox fires the timeupdate event once per frame. > >> > Safari 5 and Chrome 6 fire every 250ms. Opera 10.50 fires every > 200ms. > >> > >> > >> Now in firefox bug 571822 they are changing Firefox fires the > >> timeupdate event at every 250ms > >> > >> But this takes away control of somebody who want to do some image > >> process on every frame, as well as miss frames. > >> > >> So can we have a "newFrame" event and/or a "minTimeupdate" property to > >> say what should be the minimum time interval between consecutive > >> timeupdate event. > > > > If we have a newFrame event, might it be an idea to actually hand over > the > > frame data (audio + video) in the event? I would think that only ppl that > > want to do manipulations on the media data want to have that kind of > > resolution and it might be more efficient to just provide the data with > the > > event? > > That would actually be a rather useful property. I have several > examples of video/canvas integration that I show off regularly at > talks (and will have an article about on html5doctors.com soon), where > I just listen to the play event and start running a function every > 20ms, stopping when I see that the video is stopped or paused. Just > being able to register the function with a newFrame event instead > would be useful in terms of avoiding unnecessary computation, and > getting the data directly rather than having to draw the video into a > backing canvas and then ask for its ImageData would shave some of the > complexity off of the code. > > How should it return the data? Perhaps the video data as an ImageData > object? I don't know how audio would be returned, though. > > ~TJ > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.whatwg.org/pipermail/whatwg-whatwg.org/attachments/20100910/dcf448a8/attachment-0001.htm>
Received on Friday, 10 September 2010 08:30:01 UTC