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Opus — the Codec To End All Codecs

New submitter jmv writes "It's official. The Opus audio codec is now standardized by the IETF as RFC 6716. Opus is the first state-of-the-art, fully Free and Open audio codec ratified by a major standards organization. Better, Opus covers basically the entire audio-coding application space and manages to be as good or better than existing proprietary codecs over this whole space. Opus is the result of a collaboration between Xiph.Org, Mozilla, Microsoft (yes!), Broadcom, Octasic, and Google. See the Mozilla announcement and the Xiph.Org press release for more details."

2 of 327 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Oh boy! by Russ1642 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Audiophiles? Really? The only format they care about is original wax drums rubbed with a diamond and amplified by analog equipment connected by gold cables soaked in unicorn tears. They want nothing to do with digital audio codecs.

  2. Re:Obligatory by Lumpy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "What would make an audio codec something worth using that would make you switch?"

    A car stereo that supports it, phones that support it, etc... There is a reason that mp3 is still the king, it can be played on 98,543,221.5 different brand sof devices and another 800 are created that support mp3 every 6 seconds.

    Ogg? 5 devices.
    Apple's codec? 5 devices.

    mp3 will be around for another 10 years simply because I can buy a $0.25 chip and make the toaster my company is making play mp3's.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.