As posted on Streaming Media.com
http://www.streamingmedia.com/article.asp?id=8569&page=3&c=7
MPEG4 – Internet Streaming and Synchronized Multimedia
Where MPEG2 was designed to scale up to broadcast and high-definition quality and operating requirements, MPEG4 goes the other way. It's designed to scale down – down to dial-up internet bandwidths and to tiny devices like cell phones and PDAs; as well as still remain viable for high-quality desktop streaming up to 1Mbps. MPEG4's AAC audio codec is the root of the MP4 file type, recently popularized by Apple's iTunes, among others.
But MPEG4 is much more than just an audio and video compression/decompression scheme. It's a container for all kinds of media objects (images, text, video, animation, interactive elements like buttons and imagemaps, etc) and a way to choreograph them into a synchronized, interactive presentation. (see Interactive Authoring for MPEG4 for more info). MPEG4 also has standard interfaces to allow plugging in a DRM scheme called Intellectual Property Management and Protection (IPMP).
MPEG4 is still at the frontier of media technologies. The specification is extensive, and each vendor implements it in their own way. Try a variety of MPEG4 tools and you'll find lots of incompatibilities. But some are working to smooth the landscape. The Internet Streaming Media Association (ISMA) is an industry consortium dedicated to interoperability among MPEG4 products and services. Essentially, any implementation that's ISMA-compliant will work with any other.
Personally, I need to read up on this a bit more. Apparently MPEG 4 is very scaleable for vendors. They can shape the codec to fit their needs. I am concerned as it appears to be what MP3 is to wav. It's more compression should allow more channels, but I have to think that is going to hurt the product. .wav format is better than MP3, the file sizes are too high. Mp3 is better than WMA format, but WMA has more manageable file sizes. I think there is some real truth to the fact that the larger the size of the image/sound, the better it is. Personally I'd rather see 50 channels through voom pumping out the most prestine images, than seeing 450 channels of slop. I think the reality we're facing is MORE compression with MPEG4, which should dampen image quality. The file sizes will smaller for easier transmission, but I'm skeptical at this point. Each change in compression has taken us further away from the original presentation. We'll have to see.
http://www.streamingmedia.com/article.asp?id=8569&page=3&c=7
MPEG4 – Internet Streaming and Synchronized Multimedia
Where MPEG2 was designed to scale up to broadcast and high-definition quality and operating requirements, MPEG4 goes the other way. It's designed to scale down – down to dial-up internet bandwidths and to tiny devices like cell phones and PDAs; as well as still remain viable for high-quality desktop streaming up to 1Mbps. MPEG4's AAC audio codec is the root of the MP4 file type, recently popularized by Apple's iTunes, among others.
But MPEG4 is much more than just an audio and video compression/decompression scheme. It's a container for all kinds of media objects (images, text, video, animation, interactive elements like buttons and imagemaps, etc) and a way to choreograph them into a synchronized, interactive presentation. (see Interactive Authoring for MPEG4 for more info). MPEG4 also has standard interfaces to allow plugging in a DRM scheme called Intellectual Property Management and Protection (IPMP).
MPEG4 is still at the frontier of media technologies. The specification is extensive, and each vendor implements it in their own way. Try a variety of MPEG4 tools and you'll find lots of incompatibilities. But some are working to smooth the landscape. The Internet Streaming Media Association (ISMA) is an industry consortium dedicated to interoperability among MPEG4 products and services. Essentially, any implementation that's ISMA-compliant will work with any other.
Personally, I need to read up on this a bit more. Apparently MPEG 4 is very scaleable for vendors. They can shape the codec to fit their needs. I am concerned as it appears to be what MP3 is to wav. It's more compression should allow more channels, but I have to think that is going to hurt the product. .wav format is better than MP3, the file sizes are too high. Mp3 is better than WMA format, but WMA has more manageable file sizes. I think there is some real truth to the fact that the larger the size of the image/sound, the better it is. Personally I'd rather see 50 channels through voom pumping out the most prestine images, than seeing 450 channels of slop. I think the reality we're facing is MORE compression with MPEG4, which should dampen image quality. The file sizes will smaller for easier transmission, but I'm skeptical at this point. Each change in compression has taken us further away from the original presentation. We'll have to see.