Until they do, I don’t see any reason to think about switching to VP8.Īnnouncing the world’s fastest VP8 decoder: ffvp8 – () – From Diary of an x264 Developer, Jason Garrett-Glaser. I found that VP8 lags in quality, takes longer to encode and is harder to decode, though there are some indications that Google can quickly narrow the gap on playback requirements. A review of the quality, encoding time and CPU playback requirements. Don’t assume that it’s going to be a raging success, because when it comes to producing and launching a codec, the alleged one-trick wonders at Google don’t really seem to know what they’re doing.” Don’t stand up and salute just because Google launched it, because it wouldn’t have seen the light of day absent Google’s search business. My conclusion? – “VP8 is a blank canvas that Google must shape into a viable technology before anyone should consider its use. The Moving Picture: Past Performance is No Guarantee of Future Success – () – EventDV, by Jan Ozer (me). Webm – an open web media project – Google site for WebM. If you see any prominent articles that I’m missing, please let me know. Here’s a roughly chronological list of resources about the codec/technology. ![]() ![]() WebM/VP8 is Google’s recent entry into the codec market.
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