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by buliscape1975 2020. 1. 27. 09:40

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Discussions of the invariably make my ears perk up, maybe because it could be perceived — under the right circumstances — as alleged competition against what I. But I’m still interested in all topics concerning multimedia technology, and this sounds like a big one. Plus, that it would to help improve Ogg and Theora. Quick glossary/refresher on key terminology: Vorbis = audio codec; Theora = video codec; Ogg = container format that wraps and delivers Vorbis, Theora and several other types of media. So, the video tag is supposed to be the promised land of video on the web (just like ). I’m looking at this from a purely pragmatic perspective. Here are 2 big questions about media meant for delivery via the media tag:.

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How do people create the media?. How do people consume the media? I want to ponder these questions. How do people create the media?

I admit, I’m extremely weak when it comes to content creation. If you were to ask me how to create an Ogg/Vorbis/Theora multimedia file for distribution — as I am asking myself right now — I would draw quite a blank. So I go straight to the source — Theora.org FAQ #41: The answer has 2 links, one of which is broken, and some other example command lines in the body. All of the examples seem to assume that the video production specialist creating this content will be working entirely from a Unix-like command line. True, a lot of pros use Mac OS X which has a Unix foundation. But I have this stereotype that they would prefer something more graphical. Staying in the realm of command line tools, what about the master multimedia program, the one relied upon my open and closed projects alike?

I refer of course to. While the program decodes Theora video, it still does not feature a native Theora encoder.

Ironically, of such a project, but the effort has never really gotten off the ground. FFmpeg does, however, allow a user to compile in support for Xiph’s libraries. Plus, there is the as another solution. So the command line approach, on Unix platforms, is pretty well covered.

What about GUI-based editors that can encode Theora? I didn’t bother checking the feature lists for Adobe’s and Apple’s current offerings since I take it as a foregone conclusion that neither’s tools exports Ogg as of yet. I did a little digging and it seems that such a beast actually does exist. Is out there, and purports to run on Win/Mac/Linux. I can’t make any statements about how the tool stacks up to proprietary ones since I can barely figure out how to run any video editor at all. I just wanted to learn if a Windows or Mac content creator could actually find a GUI-based video editing tool that could output Theora, should they feel the urge to jump on the free video bandwagon. Per my understanding, Ogg/Theora/Vorbis is not necessarily the standard for the video tag.

In fact, “However, there are no known codecs that satisfy all the current players This is an ongoing issue and this section will be updated once more information is available.” Indeed, I have read that, while Apple’s Safari supports the video tag, it doesn’t support the Ogg/Theora/Vorbis open standard, opting instead for the more popular and widespread QT-MP4/H.264/AAC open standard. So this brings me to my next question: How do people consume the media? Well, via the HTML video tag, ideally. I have been wanting to take a survey of video tag support in various browsers to see how widely supported this feature is, and to see what it even looks like. All I hear is that the video tag is totally gonna be supported everywhere RSN.

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Let’s see how things are shaping up so far. As advertised, Mozilla Firefox 3.0.5 (current as of this writing) does not support the video tag, while 3.1 (beta 2 as of this writing) does. I pulled, put it on a local webserver along with an HTML file wrapping the Ogg filename in a video tag and observed the results: As suspected, Apple Safari (3.2.1) on Mac OS X can play a QuickTime file — any QuickTime file — via the video tag.

Although weird things happen with the position bar if you contain the video in a center tag.

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