OMS Video
OMS Video is an open, royalty-free video compression specification that was under development by Sun Microsystems's Open Media Commons as part of the Open Media Stack. It defines a video decoder and the associated bitstream syntax.[1] It is intended for delivery, storage and playback of video streams.
It was announced on April 11, 2008. The latest version of OMS Video Specification is 0.91, released on June 9, 2009.[1]
OMS Video design
OMS Video is based on an updated version of the H.261 codec as some of the patents on it have now expired.[2] Vorbis is planned for use as the audio codec.[3]
gollark: I don't have great automation for it, so configuring a new server would take up to 2 hours or less.
gollark: It will be done when I do it, give or take 32 femtoyears.
gollark: Fusion? Not currently, yes.
gollark: Fusion is kind of somewhat extant now and there's always Dyson swarms.
gollark: If we need unreasonably large amounts I'm sure there will be cooler technologies.
See also
- H.261
- Vorbis
- Video compression
- Open Media Commons
- Dirac (codec)
- Theora
- Codec
- Open source codecs and containers
References
- "Open Media Stack Video Specifications". Open Media Commons. 2009-06-09. Retrieved 2009-08-30.
- Nathan Willis (2008-08-22). "Sun's OMS Video codec project is a means to an end". Linux.com. Retrieved 2009-08-30.
- Robert Glidden (2008-04-11). "OMS Video, A Project of Sun's Open Media Commons Initiative". Archived from the original on 2009-09-24. Retrieved 2009-08-30.
External links
- announcement of OMS Video
- Sun ponders video codec technology - InfoWorld
- OpenMediaCommons.org official homepage
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