Linked by Thom Holwerda on Fri 19th Mar 2010 14:15 UTC
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Member since:
2010-03-21
Best way this situation can be resolved: Every browser supports both.
The main reason for supporting Ogg is that nobody should ever be forced to pay licensing to publish something on the Web. In this solution, nobody has to; you can use H.264 if you want (or need, like for phones, at least in the near future), but get ready to pay at some point.
All video currently in H.264 will just work and the video tag will be a success. People will realize that in 5 years licensing fees are going to hit them, and new video will trend towards Theora (especially as it improves). Even if Theora doesn't get used much, knowing that there is a viable alternative will keep the MPEG-LA honest so they can't pull a Unisys and start charging absurd amounts because there's no alternative.
To implement H.264, browsers should just tie into the OS support. For XP users (and Linux users without GStream Ugly), provide an official plugin and suck up the licensing costs until XP dies (most Linux users install the Ugly plugins, so the cost of them is not really significant).
Basically Mozilla has to trade Microsoft, "we'll support both if you do". Opera will follow Mozilla, and developers need to berate Safari users and make them install the Ogg plugin for Quicktime until Apple gives in and supports Ogg out of the box.