Jul 14

H.264 Defined

H.264 Defined
By Brian Brad­shaw

Video sig­nals can require enor­mous capac­ity for trans­port and stor­age. For these rea­sons, video sig­nals are almost always processed to reduce the signal’s size. This is called “video sig­nal com­pres­sion” (VSC).

Video is a series of still images called frames, that when viewed at a high enough rate, achieves the illu­sion of motion. VSC achieves a high com­pres­sion rate by sav­ing only the changes from one frame to the next, instead of each sav­ing each com­plete frame. With a well designed com­puter pro­gram, the com­pres­sion can be achieved with very lit­tle distortion.page-1-img2

The satel­lite TV com­pa­nies, “The Dish Net­work”, and “DirecTV”, were pio­neers in the use of sig­nal com­pres­sion. These com­pa­nies have used a stan­dard called MPEG-2 (MPEG is short for the “Motion Pic­tures Expert Group”). With­out these tech­niques, only a frac­tion of the chan­nels cur­rently pos­si­ble, could be man­aged by the exist­ing satel­lite systems.

Com­pres­sion has also been applied to audio sig­nals. For exam­ple “MP3” is actu­ally an abbre­vi­a­tion for “MPEG Audio layer 3″, which is part of an Audio/Video com­pres­sion pro­gram. The MP3 player phe­nom­ena would never have hap­pened with sig­nal compression.

MPEG-4 is one of the newer com­pres­sion meth­ods, designed specif­i­cally for effi­cient video sig­nal com­pres­sion. MPEG-4 was orig­i­nally devel­oped for trans­port­ing video sig­nals over the Inter­net, but has found wide suc­cess with HDTV sig­nals as well. DivX is an exam­ple of an MPEG-4 encoder.

Sony was the first com­pany to com­mer­cially intro­duce H.264 (also known as MPEG-4 Part 10), a more advanced revi­sion of the MPEG-4. Blue-Ray DVD, for exam­ple, uses the H.264 stan­dard for stor­age. This stan­dard has also gained rapid accep­tance in the secu­rity cam­era indus­try. H.264 is 2–3 times more effi­cient than the MPEG-2 standard.

About the Author: Brian Brad­shaw has cer­ti­fi­ca­tions that include: Cer­ti­fied Tech­ni­cal Spe­cial­ist (Info­Comm CTS), Microsoft MCTS, and Comp­TIA A+.

More infor­ma­tion on H.264.

Arti­cle Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Brian_Bradshaw
http://EzineArticles.com/?H.264-Defined&id=2586894

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