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Bink was inducted into the Front Line Awards Hall of Fame by the Game Developer magazine in 2009. The winners for the award were published in the January 2010 issue of the magazine. [4] Bink 2, a new version of the format, was released in 2013. [5]
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.
VC-2 Reference Encoder and Decoder – developed by BBC (open source) FFmpeg (the encoder only supports VC-2 HQ profile) VC-3 SMPTE standard (SMPTE ST 2019) Avid DNxHD; FFmpeg; VC-5 SMPTE standard (SMPTE ST 2073; a superset of CineForm HD) VC-6 SMPTE standard (SMPTE ST 2117-1) V-Nova VC-6 SDK; Grass Valley HQ/HQA/HQX Grass Valley Codec Option
Bink Video, a video format popular in many video games Bink (The Magicians of Xanth) , a character of the Xanth series by Piers Anthony Bink (producer) , a hip-hop producer
The H.264 specification calls H.261, H.262, H.263, and H.264 video coding standards and does not contain the word codec. [2] The Alliance for Open Media clearly distinguishes between the AV1 video coding format and the accompanying codec they are developing, but calls the video coding format itself a video codec specification. [3]
On2 Technologies, formerly known as The Duck Corporation, [1] was a small publicly traded company (on the American Stock Exchange), founded in New York City in 1992 [2] and headquartered in Clifton Park, New York, that designed video codec technology.
Evolution from MPEG-2 AAC-LC (Low Complexity) Profile and MPEG-4 AAC-LC Object Type to HE-AAC v2 Profile. [ 2 ] High-Efficiency Advanced Audio Coding ( HE-AAC ) is an audio coding format for lossy data compression of digital audio defined as an MPEG-4 Audio profile in ISO / IEC 14496–3.
As of April 2015, there is no free and open-source software that supports software decoding of the MVC video compression standard. [11] Popular open source H.264 and HEVC (H.265) decoders, such as those used in the FFmpeg and Libav libraries, simply ignore the second view and thus do not show the second view for stereoscopic views.