Royalty-Free MPEG Video Proposals Announced
theweatherelectric writes "Rob Glidden notes on his blog that MPEG has recently 'announced it has received proposals for a royalty-free MPEG standard and has settled on a deliberation process to consider them.' There are two tracks toward royalty-free video currently under consideration by MPEG. The first track is IVC, a new standard 'based on MPEG-1 technology which is believed a safe royalty-free baseline that can be enhanced by additional unencumbered technology described in MPEG-2, JPEG, research publications and innovative technologies which are promised to be subject to royalty-free licenses.' The second proposed track is WebVC, an attempt to get the constrained baseline profile of H.264 licensed under royalty-free terms. Rob Glidden offers an analysis of both proposals. Also of interest is Rob's short history of why royalty-free H.264 failed last time."
If this means that FF will finally become a useful browser in the modern web world then this is worth applauding.
H.264 failed, did it? Then why is 99% of the video I have H.264?
... that he thinks that VP8 isn't patent-unencumbered?
Use Borg algorithmes
Or you can just tell the MPEG-LA group to screw themselves and use VP8.
This "Intellectual Property" business is a bunch of crap.
WebM is already royalty-free, and it out-performs h.264. Where is the problem?
Support: here is a performance comparison of the latest iteration of the WebM encoder hardware, showing also previous versions and a h.264 encoder for comparison.
http://blog.webmproject.org/2011/11/time-of-dragonflies.html
If WebM is better anyway, already royalty-free, and WebM/HTML5 is supported by more browsers than h264/HTML5, then why on earth shouldn't people just go ahead and use WebM.
Where is the issue?
What is wrong with just using Theora?
Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
"MPEG has received" or MPEG-LA?
I thought I read here on Slashdot that -LA is different from just plain old MPEG.
So who is actually doing the receiving? Good guys/bad guys?
I'm not a lawyer, but I play one on the Internet. Blog
From the point of view of technological progress, proposing the use of 20-year old technology is shameful, but it really is the only solution. (until software patents get abolished)
This was also suggested by Nokia during the html5 standard discussion of the video tag:
http://en.swpat.org/wiki/Use_software_and_functionality_from_20_years_ago
And remember, this problem is caused not by trolls but by the MPEG-LA signatories: Columbia University, Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute of Korea (ETRI), France Télécom, Fujitsu, LG Electronics, Matsushita (Panasonic), Mitsubishi, Microsoft, Motorola, Nokia, Philips, Robert Bosch GmbH, Samsung, Sharp, Sony, Toshiba, and Victor Company of Japan (JVC).
Expert in software patents or patent law? Contribute to the ESP wiki!
Neither of these formats is competitive and neither can be easily extended without running into the morass of patents which surround MPEG-2 and h.264
guys are usuaaly of reality. Keep Long time FreeBSD 'doing something'
If we're looking for an antediluvial encoding with enormous overhead, why not MJPEG with PCM audio?
What is wrong with just keeping up to date? In comparison to VP8 (and H.264), Theora needs double the bandwidth per quality. Theora's development is stalled because everybody switched to the superior codec. Both are free. All browsers that support OGG/Theora also support WebM. The Android browser supports WebM but not OGG.
I know many of the patents in H.264 are on specific equations used for the integer DCT equivalent, Hadamard transform, and so on. My question is, does a patent cover an equation that is not specifically written in the patent but is mathematically equivalent? If not, couldn't some of the patent encumbrances be worked around in this fashion?
They still don't get it do they? We don't want a ROYALTY free format, but also a PATENT FREE format.
"Royalty-Free MPEG Video Proposals Proposed."
I don't have to explain:
Theora really can't even compete with MPEG-1 on either video quality at a given bitrate, or performance. It was very specifically designeed for extremely low quality, extremely low resolution, extremely low bitrate streaming video, over a decade ago...
This isn't true. There's plenty of results out there which say Theora is, while not the best, a good codec. To quote Wikipedia: More recently however, Xiph developers have compared the 1.1 Theora encoder to YouTube's H.264 and H.263+ encoders, in response to concerns raised in 2009 about Theora's inferior performance by Chris DiBona, a Google employee. They found the results from Theora to be nearly the same as YouTube's H.264 output, and much better than the H.263+ output.
There are plenty of people proclaiming that because it doesn't come out top, it's useless. Theora is far from useless: the results in any scenario that H.264 (even main profile) would be used, are still usable if you select Theora instead. They just aren't as pretty, because it's just not designed to the same constraints as H.264.
Becoming the HDTV standard would be an unrealistic goal. You attribute Theora not becoming the dominant standard due to Xiph's mishandling of the codec. The more obvious reason is politics: the MPEG group exists specifically to create audio/video standards which can be licensed. Broadcasters and content providers generally only use MPEG standards, and they just love licensing.
I'm interested to know what your theory is that Xiph could drive HDTV standards and have handled this better than a small company could?