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BurningCycles | 6 years ago

>Then HEVC isn't doing so bad

Sure, but it was massively pushed as the successor of h264 as the new de facto video codec standard, after almost a decade in use it has clearly failed in that respect.

IMO this codec generation saw no winner, instead h264 remains the undisputed king, the next battle for the crown will likely be between AV2 (or whatever it ends up being called) and VVC (Versatile Video Coding).

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ksec|6 years ago

>instead h264 remains the undisputed king

Yes. And I think there is something more than licensing. x264 managed to push H.264 way beyond what anyone could imagine. It wasn't until 2017/2018 did x265 or in fact any commercial H.265 encoder had clear advantage over x264 at 8 / 10Mbps+ bitrate. For HEVC 4K it was obvious, but 4K content never really took off, and h.264 for 1080P was good enough at those bitrate.

I dont know much about AV2, but VVC is looking very promising. I just hope they dont mess this up.

webmobdev|6 years ago

> instead h264 remains the undisputed king

Sure, because it is "good enough" for what it does. But recently, with the advent and demand of 2k and 4k videos, people realised the need of, and have started appreciating the capabilities of HEVC.

When it comes to the popularity of video encoders, my unscientific way of judging it is to look at what the pirates are using. If you look at the torrent scene, most of the popular tv series and movies are now also available HEVC encoded and they are popular too (especially the high quality 2k and 4k Blu Ray rips). It's rare to come across any VP9 videos, and HEVC is undoubtedly number 2.

Personally, even I've started re-encoding my video library with HEVC, once I discovered that the "medium" setting takes about the same time as H.264 encoding and gives an acceptable quality for (sometimes) half the file size.

I do keep an eye on encoders, and while it is good to know the work going on this field, practically speaking nearly everyone is moving on to HEVC. Nearly all the other competitors are in development and unusable because of their really slow encoding time.

p0nce|6 years ago

> practically speaking nearly everyone is moving on to HEVC. Nearly all the other competitors are in development and unusable because of their really slow encoding time.

Be careful when saying the truth!