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Google Drops Chrome's H.264 Support in Favor Of WebM

Google Drops Chrome's H.264 Support in Favor Of WebM

Enterprise & IT Jan 12,2011 0

In a move to encourage support for royalty-free codecs on the Web, Google announced this morning that it will remove the patent-encumbered H.264 codec from future versions of its Chrome Web browser. Google said that Tthe move would help accelerate adoption of Google's own WebM format, but it will also compound the technical challenges faced by content producers who want to use standards-based video to reach a broad audience on the Web.

"We expect even more rapid innovation in the web media platform in the coming year and are focusing our investments in those technologies that are developed and licensed based on open web principles. To that end, we are changing Chrome?s HTML5 support to make it consistent with the codecs already supported by the open Chromium project. Specifically, we are supporting the WebM (VP8) and Theora video codecs, and will consider adding support for other high-quality open codecs in the future. Though H.264 plays an important role in video, as our goal is to enable open innovation, support for the codec will be removed and our resources directed towards completely open codec technologies," Mike Jazayeri, Chrome Product Manager wrote at Chrome's official blog.

These changes will occur in the next couple months, Google said, encouraging publishers and developers using HTML to make any necessary changes to their sites.

Used on Blu-ray discs and supported across a wide range of mainstream consumer electronics devices, the H.264 codec is the current de facto industry standard for encoding digital video. However, in order to be used as a standard for HTML5 video tag, adopters should pay royalties to the called MPEG-LA licensing consortium .

To provide a viable open alternative to H.264, Google today ntroduced WebM, a broadly-backed community effort to develop a media format for the open web.

Google made the announcement at the I/O 2010, Google last May announced WebM media format for the web. WebM includes VP8, a high-quality video codec released by Google under a royalty-free license. It also includes Vorbis, an already open source and broadly implemented audio codec as well as a container format based on a subset of the Matroska media container.

Google claims that the VP8 codec delivers high quality video while efficiently adapting to the varying processing and bandwidth conditions found on today's broad range of web-connected devices.

A developer preview of WebM and VP8, including source code, specs, and encoding tools is available today at www.webmproject.org.

Support for WebM has since been added to Firefox, Opera, and Chrome.

Tags: GoogleChrome browserHTML5
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