Just $50 to Qualify for Free Shipping

VC-1 and H.264 Video Compression Standards for Broadband Video Services | Multimedia Systems Guide | Perfect for Streaming, Video Conferencing & Digital Broadcasting
VC-1 and H.264 Video Compression Standards for Broadband Video Services | Multimedia Systems Guide | Perfect for Streaming, Video Conferencing & Digital Broadcasting

VC-1 and H.264 Video Compression Standards for Broadband Video Services | Multimedia Systems Guide | Perfect for Streaming, Video Conferencing & Digital Broadcasting

$73.68 $133.97 -45% OFF

Free shipping on all orders over $50

7-15 days international

17 people viewing this product right now!

30-day free returns

Secure checkout

44159217

Guranteed safe checkout
amex
paypal
discover
mastercard
visa
apple pay

Description

Probably the most interesting and influential class to the authors about video compression was EE E6830 (Digital Image Processing and Understanding) at Columbia University in 1995, offered by adjunct Professors Dr. Netravali, Dr. Haskell and Dr. Puri at AT&T. In the class, they impressed the authors with how such difficult and mysterious statements in video standards could be interpreted/ understood in plain human languages. Since then, the authors had had a dream that similar services could also be provided to interpret difficult video subjects into reasonable level of explanations in the future. The VC-1 standard is fundamentally the same as WMV-9. WMV-x video compression technologies of Microsoft have long been the most popular over the Internet due to popularity of Microsoft Operating Systems. The technologies were published in August 2005 for the first time in a formal SMPTE document in the name of VC-1, and the official standard then was finalized in April 2006. In contrast, the MPEG committee recently standardized the MPEG AVC (H.264) video coding standard, whose first version was officially published in May 2003, and several subsequent amendments and corrigenda then followed until recently. These two are highly efficient compression standards that can make hi- quality video services possible for Digital Storage Media (e.g., Blu-ray DVD or HD DVD) and/or broadband networks applications (e.g., IPTV).

Reviews

******
- Verified Buyer
This book is one of the more detail on the subject.It covers both VC-1 and H.264 with an emphasis on their usage in MPEG-2 streams.This books cover topics than I haven't seen in details in other book. I did particularly found the chapter on HRD, rate control and interlace coding interesting.This book is probably not the best as an introduction to VC-1 or H.264 and a prior knowledge of those standards is necessary in my opinion.For those not interested to one of the compression standard, the book is organize in such a way that skipping section related to one standard doesn't affect the reading of the remaining section. I did only read material relative to H.264 in my first reading.Overall a very good resource.