Billed As “Possibly the Best Video Encoder Money Can Buy” Aachen, Germany and Beachwood, Ohio - MainConcept, a world leader in codecs and video technology, has released a new version of its H.264 AVC ...
Billed As “Possibly the Best Video Encoder Money Can Buy” Aachen, Germany and Beachwood, Ohio - MainConcept, a world leader in codecs and video technology, has released a new version of its H.264 AVC ...
Gardena, CA — June 18, 2008 — TMPG, Inc. is introducing an updated version of its video encoding software TMPGEnc 4.0 XPress. Due to user demand TMPG, Inc. has now added input support for AVCHD, AAC ...
Telestream has announced availability of Episode 6.3 video encoding software. Support for the x264 video codec brings higher-quality H.264 encoding to all Episode software products. In addition, ...
If you've ever done any livestreaming on the internet, then you already know that one of the most important technical aspects of doing so is properly configuring your stream settings. Your selection ...
Numerous industries in broadcast, cab le, videoconferencing and consumer electronics space are considering H.264 as the video codec of choice for new products and services. The H.264/AVC video coding ...
Should you go with a hardware or software encoding solution? Or maybe try cloud encoding? It's not only hard to choose an encoding product, it's hard to choose the type of encoding that fits best with ...
The streaming media encoding universe has evolved into a complex space with multiple, often intersecting markets. In this overview article, I'll identify the most critical market segments and discuss ...
Amino, leading IPTV software and consumer premises equipment provider, has taken another step towards making IPTV deployments easier and more efficient for Telcos. The company today confirmed that the ...
I've been experimenting with video encoding a bit (also see this thread in the Apple form: Handbrake video encoding performance, hardware assist edition). To my surprise, videos encoded in H.265 are ...
Although x264 (and the other software encoders) was running on a quad core Phenom II, while Quicksync was running on the dual core i5 3320M, but Quicksync shouldn't care much for the CPU it's bolted ...