AV1 Beats x264 and Libvpx-Vp9 in Practical Use Case (facebook.com)
An anonymous reader shares a blog post by Facebook engineer: We tested AV1 (a new open-source, royalty-free media codec) under conditions that closely match the most common real-world use cases for Facebook video. Our test examined AV1's performance vs. practical open source video encoders that can be deployed to a practical production system, rather than merely testing efficiency vs. standard reference software encoders (i.e., H.264/AVC Joint Model or JM). By structuring the test this way, we were able to show how the codec will perform in a true production environment compared with current widely used alternatives, such as x264 and libvpx-vp9.
Our testing shows AV1 surpasses its stated goal of 30% better compression than VP9, and achieves gains of 50.3%, 46.2% and 34.0%, compared to x264 main profile, x264 high profile and libvpx-vp9, respectively. The new codec requires longer encoding times vs. current alternatives, however, due to increased complexity. Our tests were conducted primarily with Standard Definition (SD) and High Definition (HD) video files, because those are currently the most popular video formats on Facebook. But because AV1's performance increased as video resolution increased, we conclude the new compression codec will likely deliver even higher efficiency gains with UHD/4K and 8K content.
Our testing shows AV1 surpasses its stated goal of 30% better compression than VP9, and achieves gains of 50.3%, 46.2% and 34.0%, compared to x264 main profile, x264 high profile and libvpx-vp9, respectively. The new codec requires longer encoding times vs. current alternatives, however, due to increased complexity. Our tests were conducted primarily with Standard Definition (SD) and High Definition (HD) video files, because those are currently the most popular video formats on Facebook. But because AV1's performance increased as video resolution increased, we conclude the new compression codec will likely deliver even higher efficiency gains with UHD/4K and 8K content.
AV1 compared to x265?
Only the State obtains its revenue by coercion. - Murray Rothbard
I am looking forward...
Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
That way it is primarily GPU agnostic as long as the code works in OCL 1.1,1.2, or 2.0 contexts.
So I guess the difference will be in CPU time and licensing, AV1 should beat H265 hands down on the second but no idea about the first.
I don't know how encoding 10 second clips of 30 fps SD/HD content 5000x slower than h.264 can be considered 'practical'.
It's an exciting format but it's way to early to start evangelizing it.
No shit, Sherlock. I am using x264 most of the time because VP9 takes orders of magnitude longer already.
It is just me, or this thread is being attacked by one (or several) trolls ... i never saw soo many useless/insults/troll posts vs real posts in slashdot
what, patent trolls are crying because they will lose money with this format?!
Higuita
Or is this percent longer, in which case that would be 50x longer to encode. That seems like a show-stopper to me.
Basically I want a royalty-free format that everyone of importance (Firefox, Safari, Chrome, Edge) gets behind. Performance is a secondary concern.
Its still up in the air whether Apple will support this. Its true they joined as a founding member but they havent saif anything. They could just be spying for all we know.
It is no worse than Windows or MacOS. Better in most cases.
The millennial that doesn't like most of the stuff designed for millennials.
If it didnt beat 264, that would be a problem and quite a shock, since 264 is old technology. So, thats not an accomplishment at all, beating a 10 year old format. They are really after beating 265, I would hope.
Ever look at the problems with Flash, IE, Edge, Windows, etc etc? Open Source has a better record. I don't think any large C/C++ program has never had a bug. Propreitary software has a history of being much worse.
Current benchmarks (mostly synthetic tests) already show promising advantages in favour of AV-1 (the previous /. on AV-1's official announcement has links. Here 's yet another)
i.e.: per bits, it managed to pack more information than H265/HEVC
Now the psycho-visual optimization needs to be tuned a bit (the compressor need to learn better *which* of the information to pack or drop for a given amount of bits, but in general AV1 allows for more). And Netflix and Google should release more of the quality oriented tests (subjective tests from actual humans, and from AIs trained to have a somewhat similar response to human's visual system).
(As AV1 was just released, it's compressor isn't finely tuned yet and might wasting bit on packing information that an actual human viewer wouldn't give a shit)
(just like back when it was release x265 compressor didn't perform as visually pleasing as the older and better tested x264 compressor)
Over all that isn't much as a surprise.
H265/HEVC is an already released codec with a history.
AV1 is the new comer released now and supposed to be the next generation.
H265/HEVC isn't AV1's main competitor
AV1 supposed competitor is the next gen codec that will come out of MPEG (JVET), but that one isn't any close to release (but is expected to perform similarily good as AV1 compared to H265/HEVC)
Also the licensing shitstorm of JVET will also need to get solved once it is released, whereas the whole purpose that sparked AV1 was to make it royalty free.
"Sufficiently advanced satire is indistinguishable from reality." - [Tips: 1DrYakQDKCQ6y52z6QbnkxHXAocMZJE61o ]
Thats a fake claim often made on slashdot that has never been proved.
Why would you even respond to such an obvious troll?
Slashdot is a trash website that still cannot even support UTF-8.
All of the intelligent people have gone elsewhere; I'm stupid enough to swing by now and then to remind myself to go elsewhere again.
They couldn't come up with a better name for it this codec? I know AVI is a container, while this is a codec, but AVI and AV1 just look so similar and could be nearly identical depending on the font. Might as well make it AllI1 (that's A el el EYE one)
My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.
I am american and many people are asking the hard questions about the risks of using open source today when it has proven to be so insecure and prone to massive bugs. I adviseing my very powerful clients that avoiding colluding with open source is the best way forward.
Bullshit.
Here is the actual letter sent by Congress to Jim Zemlin of the Linux Foundation. I doubt that you would understand it because English is obviously not your first language, but I provide it for any others that may be interested. The upshot of the letter is that Congress clearly supports OSS and is seeking to learn how to improve it.
https://energycommerce.house.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/040218-Linux-Evaluation-of-OSS-Ecosystem.pdf
H.265 is the gold standard for video. H.264 is a deprecated last-gen codec.
Your military seems to be perfectly fine in using open source software from around the world. It's open source, that's why.