Posted On: 06/15/2016 2:12:52 PM
Post# of 96881
IT ALL POINT ONE DIRECTION AND THAT IS RIGHT AT "NTEK" Right at there wheel house!!!!!
The Decline of the Standards-Based Codec—and Good Riddance
Elsewhere in the issue, you find a 4,000-word article I wrote on VP9 that doesn’t mention HEVC. Why? Because for the vast majority of streaming producers that don’t distribute 4K video to smart TVs, the codec decision isn’t VP9 versus HEVC. It’s H.264 versus VP9, and HEVC isn’t really in the picture.
This dynamic highlights the reality that standards-based codecs are declining in importance, particularly in the streaming space. The success of H.264, first with Flash and later with HTML5, merely masked this trend. That is, H.264 was wildly successful in streaming (and later HTML5) because Adobe selected it for Flash, not because it was a technology standard. This is a subtle but critical distinction. It’s also a very significant sea chan
http://www.streamingmedia.com/Articles/Editor...11602.aspx
The Decline of the Standards-Based Codec—and Good Riddance
Elsewhere in the issue, you find a 4,000-word article I wrote on VP9 that doesn’t mention HEVC. Why? Because for the vast majority of streaming producers that don’t distribute 4K video to smart TVs, the codec decision isn’t VP9 versus HEVC. It’s H.264 versus VP9, and HEVC isn’t really in the picture.
This dynamic highlights the reality that standards-based codecs are declining in importance, particularly in the streaming space. The success of H.264, first with Flash and later with HTML5, merely masked this trend. That is, H.264 was wildly successful in streaming (and later HTML5) because Adobe selected it for Flash, not because it was a technology standard. This is a subtle but critical distinction. It’s also a very significant sea chan
http://www.streamingmedia.com/Articles/Editor...11602.aspx
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