- From: Thomas Davies <Thomas.Davies@bbc.co.uk>
- Date: Thu, 22 Mar 2007 12:28:59 -0000
Hi Having been pointed at this discussion by Christian, I thought I'd let you know a bit more about where Dirac is as a royalty-free open source codec. We're certainly very keen for Dirac to be considered as one of the supported video formats. Dirac has been in development for 4 years. In compression terms it's about twice as efficient as MPEG2, competitive with H264 and VC-1 and substantially more efficient than Theora. The Dirac sourceforge site contains a full specification of the system which is very nearly complete. A subset of this, relating to professional profiles for TV production, has already been proposed to the SMPTE for standardisation as VC-2. Assuming that there are no roadblocks in this process, we intend to submit the rest of the Dirac system as VC-3 (or whatever number they're up to) towards the end of the year. So this time next year, there is a good chance that Dirac will be an international, royalty-free SMPTE standard. When we started Dirac, our intention was that the Dirac software on the website could be developed to build a real-time system. However, it proved difficult to make a system that could be a reference codec for testing the specification/draft standard and which had real-time optimisations. So in conjunction with Fluendo, we started the Schrodinger project (http://schrodinger.sf.net) which is a real-time, multi-platform implementation of Dirac being developed in parallel with the Dirac software. This isn't quite finished yet, but we will have a compliant alpha release in the next month or two. It will be alpha because although it will do real-time encoding and decoding in software, it won't compress all that well. The Dirac site software is being maintained as a reference and demonstrator system. Our aim then is to do a beta release of Schrodinger by the autumn using all the encoder optimisations in Dirac, so by the end of the year we should be "there" in terms of having a really good, efficient real-time encoder and decoder. Third parties can start designing implementations when the spec is finalised at version 1.0 in only a couple of weeks from now. We have been developing Dirac hardware as well. Hardware for the professional applications will be on sale in a very few weeks, and we're developing a prototype hardware HDTV encoder too. Thomas http://www.bbc.co.uk/ This e-mail (and any attachments) is confidential and may contain personal views which are not the views of the BBC unless specifically stated. If you have received it in error, please delete it from your system. Do not use, copy or disclose the information in any way nor act in reliance on it and notify the sender immediately. Please note that the BBC monitors e-mails sent or received. Further communication will signify your consent to this. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.whatwg.org/pipermail/whatwg-whatwg.org/attachments/20070322/492b9e85/attachment.htm>
Received on Thursday, 22 March 2007 05:28:59 UTC