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New H.266 VVC codec reduces 4K and 8K data streams by 50%
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<blockquote data-quote="cali_max99" data-source="post: 900484" data-attributes="member: 88654"><p>The goal of video compression never changes: cut redundant info without the least quality degrading and release the burden of bandwidth during data transmission accordingly. With people's increasing demand for UHD contents, H.266 technology seems very competitive, especially in broadcasting, security, education, medical, entertainment, etc.</p><p></p><p>But things may be not that desirable. HEVC is a negative example: the standard was finalized in 2013 but was not supported by Apple Inc. until 2017. H.264 is still playing a dominant role. <a href="https://videoproc.com/resource/h266-vvc.htm" target="_blank">H266 is obviously a huge challenge for multimedia software</a>.</p><p></p><p>So I'm doubting whether it will go viral in the near future. If yes, I will be really excited to see excellent video playback and editing software designed for H266.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cali_max99, post: 900484, member: 88654"] The goal of video compression never changes: cut redundant info without the least quality degrading and release the burden of bandwidth during data transmission accordingly. With people's increasing demand for UHD contents, H.266 technology seems very competitive, especially in broadcasting, security, education, medical, entertainment, etc. But things may be not that desirable. HEVC is a negative example: the standard was finalized in 2013 but was not supported by Apple Inc. until 2017. H.264 is still playing a dominant role. [URL='https://videoproc.com/resource/h266-vvc.htm']H266 is obviously a huge challenge for multimedia software[/URL]. So I'm doubting whether it will go viral in the near future. If yes, I will be really excited to see excellent video playback and editing software designed for H266. [/QUOTE]
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