Difference between revisions of "Theora"

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(A couple of paragraphs about Theora in general. Needs more VLC spcific info.)
 
m (Thora -> Theora)
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'''Theora''' is an open video codec based on [[On2]]'s [[VP3]] codec, open sourced in 2001. It's being developed by the [http://www.xiph.org/ Xiph.org foundation] of [[Ogg]] and [[Vorbis]] fame. If you want to be sure there are no legal issues with your software, Theora is a good choice, altough it's technically not as advanced as [[MPEG-4]] or [[WMV9]].
 
'''Theora''' is an open video codec based on [[On2]]'s [[VP3]] codec, open sourced in 2001. It's being developed by the [http://www.xiph.org/ Xiph.org foundation] of [[Ogg]] and [[Vorbis]] fame. If you want to be sure there are no legal issues with your software, Theora is a good choice, altough it's technically not as advanced as [[MPEG-4]] or [[WMV9]].
  
The codec is still (as of August 2005) in alpha, but the video format has been frozen so it's safe to produce Thora files for future use. Encoding performance is still poor, so it might not be a good choice for high volume applications.
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The codec is still (as of August 2005) in alpha, but the video format has been frozen so it's safe to produce Theora files for future use. Encoding performance is still poor, so it might not be a good choice for high volume applications.
  
 
Theora uses the [[Ogg]] container format and is usually combined with [[Vorbis]] audio.
 
Theora uses the [[Ogg]] container format and is usually combined with [[Vorbis]] audio.

Revision as of 21:45, 8 July 2006

Theora is an open video codec based on On2's VP3 codec, open sourced in 2001. It's being developed by the Xiph.org foundation of Ogg and Vorbis fame. If you want to be sure there are no legal issues with your software, Theora is a good choice, altough it's technically not as advanced as MPEG-4 or WMV9.

The codec is still (as of August 2005) in alpha, but the video format has been frozen so it's safe to produce Theora files for future use. Encoding performance is still poor, so it might not be a good choice for high volume applications.

Theora uses the Ogg container format and is usually combined with Vorbis audio.

Theora files can be streamed using the Icecast 2 streaming server, available for most recent Linux distributions.

VideoLAN ships Theora support. There are also builtin support or plugins for other media players such as Xine, MPlayer, Helix Player and Windows Media Player. See the Theora FAQ for more info.

Links