Second = MPEG-2 (with hardware deinterlace support to decode 1080i interlaces videos). I would argue that based on real-world usage and media available the priority should have been:įirst = H.264 (arguable the most used codec today, but with MPEG-2 still being a close second). So while you can still playback 80-90% of all Blu-Ray Disc media that are encoded with the more popular H.264 coded it is still very bad to not being able to playback 1-2 out 10. One perfect example is that approximately 10-20% of all Blu-Ray Disc movies that have been sold are are still being sold are encoded in VC-1 (WMV9). Yes I would strongly recommend prioritizing VC-1 (WMV9) over HEVC (H.265) right now because the are so many more real-world examples out there of VC-1 encoded video compared to available HEVC videos.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |