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  • Bijective BWT (7 Comments)

    David Scott has written a bijective BWT transform, which brings all the advantages of bijectiveness to BWT based compressors. Among other things, making BWT more suitable for compression-before-encryption and also give (slightly) better compression.

  • Asymmetric Binary System (116 Comments)

    Jarek Duda’s “Asymmetric Binary System” promises to be an alternate to arithmetic coding, having all the advantages, but being much simpler. Matt has coded a PAQ based compressor using ABS for back-end encoding. Update: Andrew Polar has written an alternate implementation of ABS.

  • Precomp: More Compression for your Compressed Files (3 Comments)

    So many of today’s files are already compressed (using old, outdated algorithms) that newer algorithms don’t even get a chance to touch them. Christian Schneider’s Precomp comes to rescue by undoing the harm.

  • On2 Technologies is Hiring

    There aren’t too many companies working on cutting edge codecs, and of those few this one is hiring. Best of luck.

  • China’s AVS Specifications Available (2 Comments)

    Its old news that China has developed their own Advanced Video Standard to avoid high licensing fees. English translation of the standard is now available, along with the IPR policy. Finally something technical that you can get your hands on to feed your appetite.

ATEME introduces full-featured MPEG-4 Part 10 AVC/H.264 Encoder for DSP

Posted by Sachin Garg on 7th March 2006 | Permanent Link

Press Release: ATEME introduces MPEG-4 Part 10 AVC/H.264 encoder for DSP, leveraging its portfolio of audio/video compression libraries for DSP. This encoder, intended for video surveillance and streaming media products, is optimized to run on Texas Instruments’ DaVinci™ Technology, the TMS320C64x™ and TMS320DM64x generations.

Compliant with MPEG-4 Part 10 AVC/H.264 (ISO/IEC 14496-10) standard, the H.264 encoder library for DSP provides the best unrivalled quality on a single DSP. Benefiting from ATEME’s 10 years of expertise in video encoding, this solution offers to professionals the most complex video compression standard available today on the most versatile target.

All of the tools required to reach a high coding efficiency are available including quarter pixel motion estimation and in-loop deblocking filter. In addition, a specific decision process enables fine tuning for best quality and performance allowing up to D1 standard resolution to be encoded in real-time on a single TMS320DM642. CBR, VBR and Constant Quantizer bit rate regulation modes are completed by an exclusive rate constrained mode aimed at providing low latency on bandwidth limited networks.

“The ATEME H.264 Encoder for DSP will help our customers enhancing their products and be ready for the new standard in video codec”, said Marc Guillaumet, Marketing Director. Video security products will enable better quality on low bandwidth and low-latency constrained applications. Video-telephony at home will compete with professional systems and the personal video recorder will store more movies on the same storage capacity. “Any streaming and multimedia application can take advantage of this new opportunity”.
Together with its highly efficient H.264 decoder for DSP, streaming solutions and reference designs, ATEME is a one-stop-shop for all digital video requirements.

ATEME’s H.264 encoder for DSP is now available. It will be demonstrated at the Texas Instruments Developer Conference 2006 series: Dallas, US (28 February-2 March); Paris, France (28-29 March); Birmingham, UK (30-31 March); Munich, Germany (4-5 April); Tel Aviv, Israel (7-8 June) and at the ISC West, Las Vegas, US (5-7 April 2006).

One Response to “ATEME introduces full-featured MPEG-4 Part 10 AVC/H.264 Encoder for DSP”

  1. Kenh Says:

    This isn’t related to compression, so I know it’s the wrong place to ask it, but I need to understand this.

    When using a hardware-based encoder, whether audio and/or video, and you store that information is some non-volatile way and you then provide the capability to take that information elsewhere, are you required to have some sort of DRM attached to that information?

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