Dirac 1.0.0 Released
dylan_- writes "According to their website, 'Dirac is an advanced royalty-free video compression format designed for a wide range of uses, from delivering low-resolution web content to broadcasting HD and beyond, to near-lossless studio editing.' Now a stable version of the dirac-research codebase, Dirac 1.0.0, has been released. The BBC have already successfully used the new codec during the Beijing Olympics and are looking to push it to more general use throughout the organisation. The latest version of VLC (the recently released 0.9.2) has support for Dirac using the Schroedinger library."
We don't need another codec, per se, we need a royalty free codec, that can be legally implemented in FOSS situations, and others without a lot of legal overhead. Assuming it isn't markedly worse than others in performance terms, Dirac qualifies. If by some miracle(class II or greater) mpeg4 were available under such terms, there wouldn't be any point to Dirac; but that isn't exactly likely.
Isn't that just 2 bytes? :)
*nibbles on parent's geek card*
In a nutshell, yes. HD is also not much of a big deal to the vast majority of television viewers either. The only reason there is such a fuss over it in the United States is mostly because they are rolling out HD and digital at the same time: most of the improvement has come from the change to digital, not HD. In Europe it's not such a big deal because we've already switched to digital. HD is "nice" but it's not the huge leap in visual quality some people would like you to believe.
Someone's evidentially not been watching Top Gear, which features some of the best camera work on TV and film.