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XVID 1.0 Released

Freedom66 writes "The 1.0 version of XVID codec is available. XviD is an ISO MPEG-4 compliant video codec like DIVX codec. It's an open source project which is developed and maintained by lots of people from all over the world. On the 31st December, Doom9 has made a codec comparison and XVID was at this time, one of the best codecs."

16 of 321 comments (clear)

  1. codec by Coneasfast · · Score: 5, Informative

    if you just want to download a codec so you can play movies (eg, with wmp) , go here.

    (i use mplayer for win32 now, so i don't use this anymore)

    --
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  2. Grab the 1.0 Compiled XviD 1.0 for Windows Here by da_anarchist · · Score: 5, Informative

    For Windows users, grab a compiled binary of XviD 1.0 Final with a nice installer at Koepi's Media Development Homepage. A lot easier than going through xvid.org as due to copyright issues they only host the xvid source, which must be compiled manually.

  3. DRM doesn't happen at the codec level by benwaggoner · · Score: 5, Informative

    DRM is normally done at the packet level, not the codec level. One could easily apply, say, Windows Media or Intertrust DRM with a file encoded with XVID. XVID doesn't have any meaningful effect on DRM pro or con.

    Since XVID is a MPEG-4 Part 2 codec, any DRM system that can encrypt MPEG-4 can do XVID-encode files.

    1. Re:DRM doesn't happen at the codec level by secolactico · · Score: 5, Interesting

      So I still wonder how accepted an open sourced codec will be in the short run, since 95% of desktop users run Windows, without requiring someone to manually install a codec

      Depends on what you mean by "manually install".

      Windows Media Player tries to download the codec if the media is in a format it doesn't recognize, but divx (last time I tried) is not recognized nor downloaded automatically.

      So people simply go to the divx site, download the installer and execute it. All that is required for xvid to be used by windows users is for someone to make an installer for it (and there already is one).

      That said, I haven't seen many xvid videos around in the newsgroups or on p2p networks.

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  4. Just like DivX, except.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Just like DivX, except lacking in the GATOR software installation.

    1. Re:Just like DivX, except.... by lunatik17 · · Score: 5, Informative
      You obviously don't know what you're talking about. Firstly, there is no ";-)" after Xvid. "DivX ;-)" was a cracked version of a microsoft Mpeg-4 codec.

      Divx and Xvid are two different implementations of the same standard. They are cross-compatibile.

      --

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  5. Doom9??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I'm still waiting for Doom3!

  6. still waiting ..... by drfrog · · Score: 5, Interesting

    for mpeg-4 systems part of the spec to be implemented
    overview

    --
    back in the day we didnt have no old school
  7. Ripping now... by digitalhermit · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Cool... I'm at this moment ripping "BladeRunner TDC". Transcoding with the xvid library is almost done. Quality is really very good versus some of the commercial applications out there for Windows. For example, the deep blue scenes in "Finding Nemo" tend to look blocky and sort of like a mosaic with a commercial Win2K program. Using DVDRip with xvid (on a Fedora Core 1 machine) the same scene is a lot smoother and the color gradients are not nearly as noticeable.

    On a related note, I'll soon be trying out some of the pre/post filters for DVDRip. They do take a LONG time however. I've noticed that the Linux versions, when ripping at high quality, takes at least 20% longer than the Windows program at a similar bitrate. But the quality is better so I'm happy.

  8. Re:Yea but.... by agent+oranje · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Though modded as flamebait, I'd say this is pretty insightful.

    XViD doesn't exist to make money... it doesn't exist for companies to sell their digital media to us... it exists as a good, open format which developers on any platform can play with, and any platform can play XViD movies without having to deal with royalty fees, DRM, and the likes.

    Believe it or not, there are uses for mp3s other than stealing music, and there are uses for XViD other than stealing movies. I don't want the content _I_ produce to be bogged down with DRM crap, and I don't want to be locked into an officially-licensed player five years down the line that only exists on a platform I don't even want to use. So what if commercial publishers don't want to use XViD because it doesn't have DRM - not everything on the internet was put there by commercial publishers. XViD is for people, not companies.

    --
    -agent oranje.
  9. Re:play on words by julie-h · · Score: 5, Informative

    DivX 5 was once Open DivX 4, but then they desided to go closed source again, and a fork of Open Divx 4 was made, which is what we now know as Xvid.

  10. Better porn? by McAlt+0178 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Anything that can make porn look cleaner yet dirtier looking at the same time is ok in my book... or er.. pants.

  11. Re:Clean Sheet Commercial Application by manitoulinnerd · · Score: 5, Informative

    You briefly metioned OGG in the above and OGG itself isn't a codec, its a wrapper. OGG Vorbis is an audio codec that is quite good but a totally free video codec is still only in early development. That being said the OGG or OGM has some great features. A very interesting one is the ability to encode the differences in audio streams and therefore save sometimes considerable space. It is currently used most ofter with XVID but can be used with pretty much any video (or even audio) codec. http://www.doom9.org might be able to help you for with some of this stuff. As far as the What would i do with a clean slate, i would probably use OGG with vorbis as the audio and xvid as the video... there may actually be problems with xvid and the law but i don't really know about that. Good luck.

    --
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  12. Re:Finally by tahtalim · · Score: 5, Informative
    What reverse engineering? Xvid was a fork of opendivx after it was closed (divx4 and now divx5). check mplayer's documentation about xvid.

    I now see that we desperately need meta-moderation.

  13. bit of history by nappingcracker · · Score: 5, Informative
    i did a report on divx/xvid a few years ago, here is the gist of it:

    DiVX ;-) was first "project mayo" (codename) - mayo because its difficult to make, and pretty much hit or miss - divx was first a hacked mpeg-4 codec (m$ .asp actually - really ment for streaming high quality video over broadband, hacked to work offline and "standalone"), and contained "hot" code. so divx 3.11, the version that really first took off, was illegal. the codec really exploded with the file sharing boom namely morpheus and kazaa. next release , they got rid of the stolen code, and all was good, the codec had even better quality and many of the audio syncing problems had been taken care of. by this point i had ~150 gb of video at ~300 hrs.

    then, with the next release (5.x), and even more popularity, divx went commercial, and at first, i was upset, but they were pretty good about it, they had 3 versions, the one with no ads, but "play only", one with adware + encoding, and then the full $30USD one that let you do everything without ads. i thought, well these guys deserve some money for all the work that went into this great codec.

    with version 5, divx and project mayo split (actually it was somewhere inbetween 4.x-5.x) and divx.com was born to handle distribution and all that other good commercail stuff, projectmayo.com went opensource, and became the sandbox for many projects based on divx (3vix, opendivx, etc) also, the Playa, the favored player of the project and built by the team continued to be developed here. .

    xvid was one of the spinoffs from projectmayo, and has become my favorite codec since i started using it. it seems to have the best "feel" to it, and is really really really good for animated films (to be fair, divx and the rest are really really good at animated films too, most codecs do, easy lines for the encoder to pick up and even out between frames). there are two main developers for xvid (its open so there are different builds) kopei, and nic. they both have their pros and cons, but you would be hard pressed to find them "in real life."

    most of this info can be gathered from the mentioned sites, with a little digging. if im wrong about any of this, meh. its pretty right on, though. some great resources for these codecs are the forementioned www.doom9.org is really one of the best collections of encoding how-tos and other doodads. should be required reading for any video DIY noobs. another great resource is www.divx-digest.com you can get all kinds of codecs and players there, try em all, its the best way to learn (divx-digest is a sister site to www.digital-digest.com) like i said, i really dig xvid, and divx's commercial ventures are really starting to pan out (featured in a couple of computer games/video games (lord of the rings pc maybe?), hopefully soon will be built in to dvd players- think 2+ movies in hi-res on one dvd!). please please please dont use wmv. i cant play wmv, as many non M$ people cant, and they take more cpu to decode (looks pretty and is easy though).

    before divx was known as divx, there was another company that released a project by the same name, where you would rent this cd/dvd disc thing and buy it to unlock it and watch it whenever you wanted, neat idea, poor execution, i only knew one persone that used it. they came in these little cardboard jewel cases. (before dvd players were all over, you had to get one that could play this divx )

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  14. Hackers got xvid.org? by sridev · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is what I see on the website...

    XviD owned ?? oohhhh yeahhh BloodBR ownz XviD - sorry admin leak@hackermail.com