Slashdot Mirror


Sun, Philips Push MPEG-4 Up Steep Hill

Kellym writes: "Sun Microsystems and Philips Digital Networks are putting their chips on MPEG-4 in the battle to determine the streaming media standard of the future. The companies have agreed to expand their year-long relationship to promote and develop MPEG-4 technology for broadband and wireless markets. The companies have partnered on marketing and have agreed to share technologies. In the most recent deal, Philips licensed Sun's StorEdge Media Central server technology. Philips said it will include the technology in a WebCine Server MPEG-4 system it is developing to run on Sun's Solaris Operating Environment and Sun Cobalt servers."

2 of 128 comments (clear)

  1. GOOD by Aqua+OS+X · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I want everyone and their mothers to support MPEG 4. As a web developer I am simply SICK of having to support 3 different media players and a bunch of different OSs. I want to be able to stream 1 format that can be played on every media player on every OS.

    It's time we stopped tring to one up each other with new codecs and media players. We need to seriously PICK SOMETHING. This is the only way technology gets adopted by the masses.

    I don't have to upgrade my CD player, DVD player, radio, or microwave every 6 months, why should I have to update my stupid computer's media players.

    Consumers HATE adding plugins, codecs, and players...and I hate developing for 1 million different things.

    MPEG4 is dynamic, auto-upgradable, and will make me a muuuuuch happier camper.

    --
    "Things are more moderner than before- bigger, and yet smaller- it's computers-- San Dimas High School football RULES!"
  2. Release hardware codecs with full linux support. by ikekrull · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Then watch us build your 'high-speed distributed video serving network' in our spare time at no cost to you, while MS, Apple, Real and AOL fuck around for years trying to court 'industry players' and 'content copyright holders'.

    If the whole 'Napster' thing proved anything it's that there are a shitload of people out there desparate for content they don't get supplied through 'mainstream media', but nobody wants to pay the same people who have been screwing them down at the record store for years.

    The Linux community is crying out for decent video tools, and none of the other players except maybe Real seem particularly interested in providing them.

    To beat M$ in this area, Sun and Philips are going to need some serious help, and the only place they're likely to find it these days is with the Open-Source/Free Software community.

    We have more clout with M$ than the US Justice department does, anyway.

    --
    I gots ta ding a ding dang my dang a long ling long