Linked by Eugenia Loli on Sat 1st May 2010 22:17 UTC
UPDATE: Engadget just wrote a reply to this article. The article says that you don't need an extra license to shoot commercial video with h.264 cameras, but I wonder why the license says otherwise, and Engadget's "quotes" of user/filmmaker indemnification by MPEG-LA are anonymous...
UPDATE 2: Engadget's editor replied to me. So according to him, the quotes are not anonymous, but organization-wide on purpose. If that's the case, I guess this concludes that. And I can take them on their word from now on.
UPDATE 3: And regarding royalties (as opposed to just licensing), one more reply by Engadget's editor.
Thread beginning with comment 422194
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.



Member since:
2010-05-02
Ogg Theora can be viewed with:
Firefox 3.5
Opera 10.5
Google Chrome/Chromium
Safari 4.0 with XiphQT plugin
Internet Explorer with VLC plugin
Internet Explorer with Java applet
The vast majority of your users are likely to have one of the above. I can't imagine you will have any major problems using Theora instead of H.264. You'll need some javascript to detect what plugin to use with IE, and the rest can use HTML5.