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x264 is a free and open-source software library and a command-line utility developed by VideoLAN for encoding video streams into the H.264/MPEG-4 AVC video coding format. [2] It is released under the terms of the GNU General Public License .
MediaInfo is a free, cross-platform and open-source program that displays technical information about media files, as well as tag information for many audio and video files.
x264 – H.264/MPEG-4 AVC implementation. x264 is not a codec (encoder/decoder); it is just an encoder (it cannot decode video). OpenH264 – H.264 baseline profile encoding and decoding OpenVVC [ 1 ] an VVC /H.266 Real Time - Decoder for Mac OS , Windows , Linux and Android and special Version of FFmpeg , [ 2 ] which was used for Ateme ...
FFmpeg (by default decoder only, but see above the compiling options). AMR-WB+. 3GPP TS 26.273 – AMR-WB+ speech Codec (C-source code) – reference implementation [29] Enhanced Voice Services (EVS) 3GPP TS.26.443 – Codec for Enhanced Voice Services (EVS) – ANSI C code (floating-point) [30] 3rd Generation Partnership Project 2 (3GPP2)
Intel provides various licensing options on their implementation of an H.264 (amongst others) encoder/decoder as part of their Integrated Performance Primitives package, which includes an evaluation source code download. MainConcept H.264/AVC SDK offers encoding and decoding in all profiles and levels supported by the standard.
x265 builds on source code from x264, an open-source video encoder for the previous MPEG video coding standard, H.264/MPEG-4 AVC. The project has licensed the rights to use the x264 source code. [3] Development on x265 began in March 2013. [7] MulticoreWare made the source code for x265 publicly available on July 23, 2013. [4] [5]
Avidemux is a free and open-source software application for non-linear video editing and transcoding multimedia files. The developers intend it as "a simple tool for simple video processing tasks" and to allow users "to do elementary things in a very straightforward way". [3]
On October 30, 2013, Rowan Trollope from Cisco Systems announced that Cisco would release both binaries and source code of an H.264 video codec called OpenH264 under the Simplified BSD license, and pay all royalties for its use to MPEG LA themselves for any software projects that use Cisco's precompiled binaries (thus making Cisco's OpenH264 binaries free to use); any software projects that ...