Your Ad Here

NVIDIA and Abobe combine forces for hardware-accelerated flash video


This is either a good thing or a bad thing. Actually, like most things, it’s a bit of both. Adobe’s FLV file format is the de facto standard for web video due to sharing sites like YouTube using it exclusively. Many would argue that’s a bad thing (despite the fact that it works well for most people) because it gives a single company a stranglehold over an entire province of internet content.

So when NVIDIA works with them to accelerate decoding the format, it’s a bit of a mixed blessing. Better performance and integration like this will surely extend the life of, and silence performance complaints about, FLV. For now it’s a good thing, but come HTML5…

See, there are plans to implement a plain ‘ol <video> tag which would embed the actual video in the web browser, sans Flash wrapper. This means that (hopefully) it’d be hardware-accelerated regardless of the make and model of your video card, and most importantly, regardless of any licensing agreement that’s been made with the video’s proprietor.

Still, HTML 5 is a ways off (and widespread video tags even further off, considering how entrenched FLVs are), so right now it’s the devil you know, and it’ll run better than ever. I have no problem with that.

[via Netbooked and Lilliputing]



  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • email
  • PDF
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Google Bookmarks
  • RSS

This post is tagged: , , ,

Leave a Reply





  • Google TV Facebook page teases new announcement at the way tomorrowGoogle TV Facebook page teases new announcement at the way tomorrow

    Since Eric Schmidt made the rather bold proclamation that "most" new TVs would have Google TV embedded by summer 2012, we've all been looking forward to something "big" from Mountain View. Well, in the event you can believe the services' Facebook page, "big announcements" are only what we are able to expect Monday. A post on Google TV's profile leaves a great deal to the imagination,… »
  • Switched On: The fit and the pendulumSwitched On: The fit and the pendulum

    Each week Ross Rubin contributes Switched On , a column about consumer technology. In the pre-smartphone era, the industry thinking about making mobile phones smaller. Within the 2001 movie Zoolander, the title character played by Ben Stiller uses a humorously diminutive flip phone in the direction of the dimensions of a Bluetooth headset than the StarTAC it parodies. But when the… »

Categories

Subscribe

Enter your email address: