New video codec to ease
pressure on global networks
25 January 2013
A new video coding
standard building on the PrimeTime Emmy award winning ITU-T
H.264 / MPEG-4 AVC was agreed by ITU members today.
The new codec will
considerably ease the burden on global networks where, by some
estimates, video accounts for more than half of bandwidth use.
The new standard, known informally as ‘High Efficiency Video
Coding’ (HEVC) will need only half the bit rate of its
predecessor, ITU-T H.264 / MPEG-4 Part 10 ‘Advanced Video
Coding’ (AVC), which currently
accounts for over 80 per cent of all web video. HEVC will
unleash a new phase of innovation in video production spanning
the whole ICT spectrum, from mobile devices through to
Ultra-High Definition TV.
ITU-T’s Study Group
16 has agreed first-stage approval (consent) of the
much-anticipated standard known formally as Recommendation ITU-T
H.265 or ISO/IEC 23008-2. It is the product of
collaboration between the ITU Video Coding Experts Group (VCEG)
and the ISO/IEC Moving Picture Experts Group (MPEG).
Dr Hamadoun I. Touré, Secretary-General, ITU: “ITU-T H.264
underpinned rapid progression and expansion of the video
ecosystem, with many adopting it to replace their own
proprietary compression codecs. The industry continues to look
to ITU and its partners as the global benchmark for video
compression, and I have no doubt that this new standard will be
as effective as its predecessor in enabling the next wave of
innovation in this fast-paced industry.”
ITU-T H.264 / MPEG-4
AVCis deployed in products and
services from companies including Adobe, Apple, BBC, BT, France
Telecom, Intel, Microsoft, Motorola, Nokia, Polycom, Samsung,
Sony, Tandberg, Toshiba
and others to deliver high definition video images over
broadcast television, cable TV, a variety of direct-broadcast
satellite-based television services, Blu-Ray disc formats,
mobile phones, videoconferencing tools, digital storage media,
and Internet Protocol television (IPTV).
It remains the most deployed global video compression standard.
ITU-T H.265 / ISO/IEC 23008-2 HEVC will provide a flexible,
reliable and robust solution, future-proofed to support the next
decade of video. The new standard is designed to take account of
advancing screen resolutions and is expected to be phased in as
high-end products and services outgrow the limits of current
network and display technology.
Companies including ATEME, Broadcom, Cyberlink, Ericsson,
Fraunhofer HHI, Mitsubishi, NHK, NTT DOCOMO and Qualcomm
have already showcased implementations of HEVC. The new
standardincludes a ‘Main’ profile that
supports 8-bit 4:2:0 video, a ‘Main 10’ profile with 10-bit
support, and a ‘Main Still Picture’ profile for still image
coding that employs the same coding tools as a video ‘intra’
picture.
The ITU/ISO/IEC Joint Collaborative Team on Video Coding
(JCT-VC) (formerly JVT) will continue work on a range of
extensions to HEVC, including support for 12-bit video as well
as 4:2:2 and 4:4:4 chroma formats. Another important element of
this work will be the progression of HEVC towards scalable video
coding. The three bodies will also work within the Joint
Collaborative Team on 3D-Video (JCT-3V) on the extension of HEVC
towards stereoscopic and 3D video coding.