standard is a really bad name for this.
I'm betting on Daala and Thor. Both the teams involved are motivated by the same goal to make a royalty free codec. I think the odds are good that the IETF standards process will result in combining the best ideas of…
This codec is designed more for interactive video conferencing applications and is not really great for non interactive encoding of a movie for playback. The choice of CBP came from that is what the IETF is considering…
If the x264 people think they can give x264 to Cisco under a license that we can compile it and distribute the binaries with no changes to our MPEG LA licensing agreements, tell them to get talk of me (fluffy@cisco.com)…
This is a very insightful comment. There has also been some debate about the appropriateness of non english comments and comments that only made sense in context of internal code names for Cisco projects. The high level…
Open to suggestions but the current plan would be to make it match up roughly with the Firefox 6 week release cycle. Definitely versioned and fingerprinted such that Firefox can verify that Cisco did not compile in bad…
It costs Cisco lots (I work at cisco) as we were not close to paying the 6.5 million cap before this. Mozilla has been contributing to the code and making sure the project runs well but not towards any MPEG-LA payments.…
Hi, I'm one of the people working on the stuff Cisco open sourced and yes, it will be predictable and verifiable builds. We are working with some of the Mozilla folks to make sure we can do that.
standard is a really bad name for this.
I'm betting on Daala and Thor. Both the teams involved are motivated by the same goal to make a royalty free codec. I think the odds are good that the IETF standards process will result in combining the best ideas of…
This codec is designed more for interactive video conferencing applications and is not really great for non interactive encoding of a movie for playback. The choice of CBP came from that is what the IETF is considering…
If the x264 people think they can give x264 to Cisco under a license that we can compile it and distribute the binaries with no changes to our MPEG LA licensing agreements, tell them to get talk of me (fluffy@cisco.com)…
This is a very insightful comment. There has also been some debate about the appropriateness of non english comments and comments that only made sense in context of internal code names for Cisco projects. The high level…
Open to suggestions but the current plan would be to make it match up roughly with the Firefox 6 week release cycle. Definitely versioned and fingerprinted such that Firefox can verify that Cisco did not compile in bad…
It costs Cisco lots (I work at cisco) as we were not close to paying the 6.5 million cap before this. Mozilla has been contributing to the code and making sure the project runs well but not towards any MPEG-LA payments.…
Hi, I'm one of the people working on the stuff Cisco open sourced and yes, it will be predictable and verifiable builds. We are working with some of the Mozilla folks to make sure we can do that.