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Essential Video Coding - Wikipedia

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Video compression standard

MPEG-5 Essential Video Coding (EVC), standardized as ISO/IEC 23094-1, is a video compression standard that has been completed in April 2020 by decision of MPEG Working Group 11 at its 130th meeting.[1][2][3][4]

The standard consists of a royalty-free subset and individually switchable enhancements.[2][3][5]

The publicly available requirements document[5] outlines a development process that is defensive against patent threats: Two sets of coding tools, base and enhanced, are defined:

Each of the 21 payable tools can have separately acquired and separately negotiated and separately Traded License agreements.[7] Each can be individually turned off and, when necessary, replaced by a corresponding cost free baseline profile tool. This structure makes it easy to fall back to a smaller set of tools in the future, if, for example, licensing complications occur around a specific tool, without breaking compatibility with already deployed decoders.[7]

This video codec is compatible with hardware accelerators - decoders originally developed for older standards such as AVC/HEVC at least in the Baseline profile.[8]

A proposal by Samsung, Huawei and Qualcomm forms the basis of EVC.[9]

MPAI aims to significantly enhance the performance of EVC by improving or replacing traditional tools with AI-based tools, with the goal of reaching at least 25% improvement over the baseline profile of EVC.[14][15][16]

  1. ^ Pennington, Adrian (6 April 2019). "NAB 2019: Five trends to watch". IBC. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  2. ^ a b Timmerer, Christian (14 February 2019). "MPEG 125 Meeting Report". Bitmovin. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  3. ^ a b Gibellino, Diego (4 March 2019). "Introducing MPEG-5". Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  4. ^ "MPEG-5 EVC gets final approval". CSImagazine.com. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  5. ^ a b "Requirements for a New Video Coding Standard". 12 October 2018. Retrieved 6 April 2019.
  6. ^ Chiariglione, Leonardo (28 January 2018). "A crisis, the causes and a solution". Retrieved 6 April 2019. I saw the danger coming and designed a strategy for it. This would create two tracks in MPEG: one track producing royalty free standards (Option 1, in ISO language) and the other the traditional Fair Reasonable and Non Discriminatory (FRAND) standards (Option 2, in ISO language).
  7. ^ a b c Samuelsson, Jonatan; Choi, Kiho; Chen, Jianle; Rusanovskyy, Dmytro (2020). "MPEG-5 Part 1: Essential Video Coding". SMPTE Motion Imaging Journal. 129 (7). SMPTE: 10–16. doi:10.5594/JMI.2020.3001795. S2CID 225463271. Archived from the original on November 7, 2020. Retrieved 26 June 2021.
  8. ^ McCann, Ken. "MPEG-5 Essential Video Coding (EVC)" (PDF). itu.int/en/ITU-T/Workshops-and-Seminars/20191008/Documents. EVC uses a novel profile structure. The Baseline profile includes only technologies that are more than 20 years old or that were submitted with a royalty‑free declaration. In contrast, the Main profile adds a small number of additional tools that can be switched off independently—allowing decoders (including hardware accelerators originally developed for older standards such as AVC/HEVC) to continue operating on the Baseline profile.
  9. ^ Ozer, Jan (October 15, 2019). "Inside MPEG's Ambitious Plan to Launch 3 Video Codecs in 2020". Retrieved June 12, 2020. Though the EVC Main profile uses royalty-bearing "tools," these can be switched on and off with "limited loss of performance." This was the model deployed by Divideon and their xvc codec, and, in theory, it allows those deploying the technology to pick and choose both the performance and the associated royalty cost. (…) Two proposals were submitted in response to MPEG's call for proposals for MPEG-5 Part 1, and MPEG selected the proposal from Samsung, Huawei, and Qualcomm
  10. ^ "eXtra-fast Essential Video Encoder (XEVE)". January 9, 2023 – via GitHub.
  11. ^ "1.29 eXtra-fast Essential Video Encoder (XEVE)". FFmpeg General Documentation.
  12. ^ "1.30 eXtra-fast Essential Video Decoder (XEVD)". FFmpeg General Documentation.
  13. ^ "eXtra-fast Essential Video Decoder (XEVD)". github.
  14. ^ "AI-Enhanced Video Coding (MPAI-EVC)". Moving Picture, Audio and data Coding by Artificial Intelligence.
  15. ^ "Basic Applications, Technologies and Benefits for Video Coding by means of Artificial Intelligence". mpai.community/news/presentations/#ShortPresentation. 23 February 2021. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
  16. ^ "Video Basic Applications, Technologies and Benefits for Video Coding by means of Artificial Intelligence". mpai.community/news/presentations/#ShortPresentation. 23 February 2021. Retrieved 21 September 2022.
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