DivX CEO on Hackers, YouTube, Technology 59
Cintia Barreto writes to mention a Red Herring interview with Jordan Greenhall The CEO of DivX talks about the company's roots, a little bit about YouTube, and how entertainment technology grew out of the file-sharing days of the late 90s. From the article: "We sat down and said what you just created will do these things, people will adopt it, they will use it to transmit high-quality video, probably movies, probably television shows, probably porn--on the Internet--and in this domain and in this particular way. In some timeframe, they will want to be able transmit that from the PC into the living room. It will be the kind of content that wants to live in the living room--just like what happened with MP3. You had music files sitting in your PC and you wanted to take them portable. Somebody had to invent the portable MP3 player. In fact, I was at MP3.com at the time, I got to physically touch the first MP3 player ever made. It was made by these guys from Korea--it was literally duct tape."
LITERALLY (Score:2, Funny)
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Duct tape? (Score:2, Funny)
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But I can say that quality has gotten better from the DivX 3.11 days to modern codecs.
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Its like the Internet tubes of the video world. (Score:1)
"When you've invented an algorithm that does compare this frame to this frame and see if there's any difference between them, it's done."
Re Apple and "Random"
Why not tell us more about battery life, cpu usage, file size, quality, encoder software, costs and your DivX certified?
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Re: Apple and "Random", apparently "Random" is his way of saying, "we have no chance whatsoever, but I want to pretend like it could happen at any moment". Yes, of course, technically Apple could use DivX, but they've already chosen the video format they want to use, and integrated it into their OS and iPod. Even if DivX offered improvements to power-consumption, it would already take quite a bit for Apple to back away from h264 and encode the iTMS in some other format. Maybe... maybe if DivX was vastly
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"So he created the first DivX"? (Score:5, Informative)
And BTW it was not the "first" DivX [wikipedia.org] either...
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Anyway, the device he saw was clearly hacked together. There's millions of people hacking together projects at home. Ever hear of the ambient orb? Before I did, I'd embedded an RGB LED in my USB keyboard that sets its colour based on web events.
My suspicions are confirmed... (Score:5, Interesting)
I always had this vague feeling that whoever ran DivX was an asshole, and now I feel vindicated. I spent too many years just wanting the codec, and only being allowed to download it with a bunch of crappy software.
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Re:My suspicions are confirmed... (Score:4, Insightful)
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"What the community really wants is a Winamp, not a Linux."
Eiger Labs MPMan (Score:5, Informative)
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Re the Eiger / Hango: http://reviews.cnet.com/4520-6450_7-5622055-1.htm
Almost (Score:4, Informative)
The first licensee of MP3 from Fraunhofer was Macromedia and they called it SWA. This was around mid 1995 IIRC.
I'm sure Buzz Kettles from Macromedia and Murat Konar were the first people to create MP3 playback and they did it through Shockwave.
The first multi song MP3 player was written in Director 5 in late 1995 and it allowed the user to select any song from a certain CD, The Chemical Brothers' Exit Planet Dust. It was demoed by Phil Shiller who at that time worked on the Director time at Macromedia. Back then, it was compressed at a bit rate of 96 kbps so that it would fit on a 100 MB drive which at time cost around 200 dollars.
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Just because it works on Win 3.1 doesn't mean it was written when Win 3.1 was released.
From Wikipedia:
Later, on July 7, 1994 the Fraunhofer Society released the first software MP3 encoder called l3enc. The filename extension
Consequences (Score:5, Interesting)
Then there were portable MP3 players and DV recorders and cell phone videos followed by easy to use distribution services for people to share them through, and so it was.
My prediction? This stuff was just giving us a glimpse of what is to eventually come. There is a technology that is completely linked up with these others through the distribution channel it will inevitably find itself on. Desktop fabrication. I'm talking 3D printers with downloadable blueprints that people share through P2P networks. You think the RIAA and MPAA are bad? Just wait till car manufacturers and insurance comopanies figure out that there are people driving "pirated" custom printed AMG55's that aren't made by Mercedes. I realize there's already a pirated car market in the East, but it is NOTHING like what we will eventually have. We're going to seriously reconsider how we view products, raw materials, IP, liability, etc. This is only the beginning.
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Hey, it might happen!
Never going to happen (Score:2)
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But for example medicine is not that far away.
Instead of buying pills at the pharmacy we could download recipes from a secure site and produce it at home.
Enforcing patents and controlling access to medicine recipes, could make RIAA look innocent.
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Even that's pretty far fetched. Unless you're talking the *really* simple to manufacture stuff where you basically grind something up and stick it into a capsule.
A semi-valid example would be to look at how easy/difficult it is to make recreational drugs. Some of the drugs made from chemicals (I'm thinking PCP) are extremely hazardous to manufacture without proper tools/ventilation. Other drug
Brief history of Divx. (Score:2, Informative)
Divx 4: Opendivx, a new Simple Profile mpeg 4 encoder
Divx 5: Closed Source, ASP codec, the closing of the source led to the XviD project
Divx 6: Some improvements to Divx 5, and a new container format (like AVI or MKV).
There have been rumors about Divx making an AVC (h264) codec.
However, currently, Divx is FAR surpassed in encoding quality and speed by XviD. Also, XviD streams are COMPLETELY compatable with DivX players/streams, as
pr0n (Score:2)
Stolen Ideas? (Score:2)