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[News] Ogg Makes Very Impressive Progress, Beats H.264 at Some Levels

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Theora Ahead of H.264 In Objective PSNR Quality 

,----[ Quote ]
| Xiph hackers have been hard at work improving the Theora codec over the past 
| year, with the latest versions gaining on and passing h.264 in objective PSNR 
| quality measurements.  
`----

http://tech.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=09/05/07/2352203&art_pos=1

Open source video codec Ogg Theora hot on the heels of H.264

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| For this reason, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and members of the Web 
| Hypertext Application Technology Working Group (WhatWG) proposed the open 
| source Ogg codecs Theora (video) and Vorbis (audio), developed by the Xiph 
| Foundation, as the standard for the planned video and audio elements in 
| the "W3C Editor's Draft" for HTML 5.     
`----

http://www.heise.de/english/newsticker/news/137542

continued theora improvements

,----[ Quote ]
| Monty posted another update on the work that’s been going on to improve the 
| Theora encoder. It’s worth re-posting here because I think that it includes  
| some compelling images and graphs that show you improvements. So I would 
| suggest that people wander over and have a look at his update.  
`----

http://www.0xdeadbeef.com/weblog/?p=1300


Related:

The argument for Xiph codecs

,----[ Quote ]
| Yesterday I had a random technology developer email me with the question why
| he should use Ogg over other codecs that have a much more widespread uptake.
| Of course with “Ogg” he meant “Xiph codecs”, since a comparison of container
| formats isn’t really what people are asking for. He felt positive towards
| open codecs, but didn’t really know how to express this with reason. So I
| wrote up some arguments that can be made for open codecs.
`----

http://blog.gingertech.net/2009/02/16/the-argument-for-xiph-codecs/


why open video?

,----[ Quote ]
| There’s one exception to this: video on the web.  Although videos are
| available on the web via sites like youtube, they don’t share the same
| democratized characteristics that have made the web vibrant and distributed.
| And it shows.  That centralization has created some interesting problems that
| have symptoms like censorship via abuse of the DMCA and an
| overly-concentrated audience on a few sites that have the resources and
| technology to host video.  I believe that problems like the ones we see with
| youtube are a symptom of the larger problem of the lack of decentralization
| and competition in video technology - very different than where the rest of
| the web is today.
|
| In my mind there are two things that help drive that kind of
| decentralization:
|
|     * You should be able to easily understand how something moves from a
|     computer-readable format to something that is presented to a user.  For
|     example, turning HTML into a document, turning a JPEG file into a picture
|     on the screen or using HTTP to download a file.
|     * You must be able to implement and deliver that technology without
|     requiring anyone’s permission or license.  In reality this means that it
|     should be available on a royalty-free basis and without encumbered
|     documentation.
`----

http://www.0xdeadbeef.com/weblog/?p=977


Mozilla champions Open Source Web video

,----[ Quote ]
| THE MOZILLA FOUNDATION is putting its significant clout and cash behind an
| initiative to create an open video format on the Web which would let users
| watch streaming video all over the Internet without having to use a plug-in.
`----

http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/649/1050649/mozilla-champions-open-source-web-video


Mozilla Goes to Bat for Open-Source Video on the Web

http://blog.wired.com/business/2009/01/mozilla-goes-to.html


Video

,----[ Quote ]
| The video element is used to embed video content in an HTML or XHTML
| document.  The video element was added as part of HTML 5.
`----

http://developer.mozilla.org/En/HTML/Element/Video


Firefox to Support Open Video Format in Next Release

,----[ Quote ]
| Chris Blizzard reports from this week’s Mozilla Summit: Firefox will natively
| support the Ogg Theora video format!
`----

http://internet.boredblogs.net/?p=2363


two cool things: ogg support in mozilla and canvas for IE

http://www.0xdeadbeef.com/weblog/?p=492


Theora Video Backend for Firefox Landed

,----[ Quote ]
| It was announced at the Firefix Plus summit today that Firefox will include
| native Theora and Vorbis support for the HTML 5 media elements. So <video>
| and <audio> will support those codecs built into Firefox itself. Chris
| Blizzard posted about this earlier.
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http://www.bluishcoder.co.nz/2008/07/theora-video-backend-for-firefox-landed.html
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