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Turing – A High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC/H.265) encoder implemented by BBC Research. libaom – Reference implementation for the royalty free AV1 video coding format by AOMedia, inheriting technologies from VP9, Daala and Thor. Kvazaar – An academic open-source encoder based on the High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC/H.265) standard.
K-Lite Mega Codec Pack was chosen as a Softpedia Pick. [15] Softpedia also reported K-Lite Codec Pack 5.2 Full, K-Lite Codec Pack Full 5.2 Update, and K-Lite Codec Pack 2.7 64-bit Edition have been downloaded a combined total of 1,452,750 times up until this date, and have received a user rating of 4.3 out of 5 from 2,082 users.
VP9 is an open and royalty-free [1] video coding format developed by Google. VP9 is the successor to VP8 and competes mainly with MPEG's High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC/H.265). At first, VP9 was mainly used on Google's video platform YouTube.
Blackbird FORscene video codec; Firebird [62] Original FORscene video codec; Digital Video Interactive standards: RTV 2.1 (a.k.a. Indeo 2) FFmpeg (decoder only) PLV (Production Level Video) ActionMedia II driver (decoder only) Indeo 3 [63] /4/5 [64] FFmpeg (decoder only) Microsoft Video 1 (MSV1, MS-CRAM, based on MotiVE) FFmpeg (decoder only)
The quality the codec can achieve is heavily based on the compression format the codec uses. A codec is not a format, and there may be multiple codecs that implement the same compression specification – for example, MPEG-1 codecs typically do not achieve quality/size ratio comparable to codecs that implement the more modern H.264 specification.
libvpx was released as free software by Google on May 19, 2010, after the acquisition of On2 Technologies for an estimate of over 120 million US dollars. [2] [4] In June 2010, Google amended the VP8 codec software license to the 3-clause BSD license [5] [6] [7] after some contention over whether the original license was actually open source. [8 ...
With a later version, now named “HEVC Video Extensions” (plural form), it became paid software, costing US$0.99. [122] A separate version called “HEVC Video Extensions from Device Manufacturer”, presumably intended for computers with HEVC support in hardware, is still available for free.
Free and open-source software portal; libavcodec is a free and open-source [4] library of codecs for encoding and decoding video and audio data. [5]libavcodec is an integral part of many open-source multimedia applications and frameworks.