Linked by Thom Holwerda on Wed 14th Nov 2012 22:12 UTC
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RE[5]: IE10 still disappointing
by lemur2 on Fri 16th Nov 2012 10:35
in reply to "RE[4]: IE10 still disappointing"
There seems to be no such thing as a hardware product --- amateur or pro --- that supports WebM natively.
I beg to differ.
http://blog.webmproject.org/
Under the heading: "Sixth Generation VP8 Hardware Accelerators Released"
I quote: "The VP8 hardware cores have now been licensed to over 80 chip companies, and both the decoder and encoder are in mass production from a number of partners."
Every single Android device since Android 2.3 Gingerbread supports VP8 & WebM. Every single Android device since Android 4 Ice Cream Sandwich supports WebM decoding in hardware.
Android activations now number over 1.3 million per day. There are now over 500 million Android devices (not all of them are Android 2.3 or better, I grant you, but most of them are).
http://androidandme.com/2012/09/news/android-activations-now-at-1-3...
Every new video uploaded to Youtube is encoded to WebM. Over 99% of videos viewed can be viewed as WebM.
http://www.engadget.com/2011/04/20/youtube-starts-transcoding-all-n...
Google's entire infrastructure, obviously, supports WebM. If one chooses HTML5/WebM for YouTube, one now effectively suffers no penalty for doing so.
Ubuntu is heading towards 9% of the PC market. Ubuntu supports WebM.
http://www.thevarguy.com/2012/11/06/open-source-ubuntu-os-makes-str...
You are a long, long way behind the times.
Edited 2012-11-16 10:50 UTC




Member since:
2010-01-07
I have the plug-in for IE --- which works just fine with IE 10.
But finding a WebM video in the wild is quite the challenge. There doesn't seem to be anything out there but a transcode for YouTube.
There seems to be no such thing as a hardware product --- amateur or pro --- that supports WebM natively. While H.264 hardware is available for every video application you could name.
The final problem is HEVC. The next-generation proprietary codec. There are huge potential savings in bandwidth here for all users and video providers.