1 / 14

Presents IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum 2003

Presents IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum 2003. H.264 Technology Update. Presented by Stephan Wenger TU Berlin Member of the Joint Video Team. Outline. History of the H.264 Development Current Timeline Key Applications and Profiles Technology in H.264

kalona
Download Presentation

Presents IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum 2003

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Presents IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum 2003

  2. H.264 Technology Update Presented by Stephan Wenger TU BerlinMember of the Joint Video Team

  3. Outline • History of the H.264 Development • Current Timeline • Key Applications and Profiles • Technology in H.264 • Technology not included in H.264 • Royalty-free Baseline • News on Licensing • Performance IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum – May 2003 – Geneva, Switzerland

  4. History of video compression • Early Video Codecs • Proprietary PCM, DPCM, ITU-T H.120 • Motion JPEG • First generation of DCT-based codecs • H.261, MPEG-1 Part 2, H.262/MPEG-2 Part 2 • 8x8 Block, 16x16 pel macroblock, MB-based motion compensation • Sophisticated interlace support (MPEG-2 only) • Second generation, H.263, H.263+, MPEG-4 Part 2 • Block-based motion compensation • Generally improved design • Error resilience features • Third generation, H.264, MPEG-4 Part 10 (AVC) • 4x4 Blocks for transform, flexible block sizes for motion compensation • Many new tools IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum – May 2003 – Geneva, Switzerland

  5. History of H.264 • “Long-term” project H.26L was around since at least 1997 • Not much progress until finalization of H.263++ in 2000…... at which time the project got significant momentum • 09/01: core codec functionality (progressive scan, interactive applications) available • Very limited support for classic broadcast…… but interest was expressed in enhanced functionality for this market • No significant changes in the core codec since then • 12/01: MPEG adopts H.26L, formation of JVT • Support for broadcast requires tools for interlace, high-delay, buffer management • Mid 2002: “culture clashes”, unified codec design equally suitable for broadcast and interactive applications hammered out • Late 2002: finalization, debugging, profile design, politics • March 2003: standard out for ballot in the ITU-T and ISO/IEC IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum – May 2003 – Geneva, Switzerland

  6. Current Timeline • In Short: It’s done! • 28.03.2003: H.264 is out for “Consent” in the ITU-T • Four sets of Comments have been received • Nothing critical • SG16 meeting in two weeks will likely ratify the Recommendation • In the ISO/IEC ballot has not yet started • Work is in progress on • Initial Corrigenda to catch those few bugs that slipped through the final editing process – may be rolled into the text if procedurally feasible • A small enhancement of H.264 to support 10 and 12 bit color and colorspaces other than YUV 4:2:0 • Conformance test points, Software availability, and similar • The author expects that JVT will dissolve in mid 2004 after the mentioned work items are completed IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum – May 2003 – Geneva, Switzerland

  7. Key Applications and Profiles Baseline • Progressive Scan, Error Resilience • Conversational Services • Video-Conference, wireline/wireless Video-Telephone • Simple Streaming applications Main • Interlace, B-Slices, CABAC, NO Error Resilience • Broadcast Applications w/ MPEG-2 transport • DVD and similar, TV-quality Extended • Interlace, B-Slices, SP-Slices, Error Resilience • Streaming in wireline/wireless environments • Progressive Scan Broadcast? IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum – May 2003 – Geneva, Switzerland

  8. H.264 Technology Common to all Profiles • 4x4 Transform, integer exact • Complex motion model, variable block sizes • Multiple Reference Frames, ERPS • Intra-Prediction (from Intra/Inter information) • Efficient entropy coding (CA-VLC) Baseline Main Extended ASO - ASO FMO - FMO RS - RS - Interlace, MB-AFF Interlace MB-AFF - CABAC - - B-Slices B-Slices - - SP-Slices Royalty Free Royalties Royalties IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum – May 2003 – Geneva, Switzerland

  9. Non-H.264 Technology Considered, but not included • Scalability support – an academic concept • Temporal Scalability available through non-stored pictures • Spatial/SNR scalability never accepted by users in previous standards • FGS, no acceptance so far, drift-based • Reference Picture Re-Sampling (like Annex P/H.263) • Change picture sizes on-the-fly • Difficult to implement, no clear coding gain • Variable MB-sizes (like Annex Q/H.263) • No clear coding gain, flexible block sizes catch most of it) Considered and deferred • “Professional” Colorspaces (YUV 4:2:2, YUV 4:4:4, RGB) • Sampling Depth of 10 bits/12 bits IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum – May 2003 – Geneva, Switzerland

  10. Royalty-Free Baseline • Royalty-Free Baseline (RFB) Goal established early • Common understanding in Videoconferencing Industry • Buy-in from most big players in the field • Very few exceptions • Goal was achieved by • Requiring commitment to RFB for all new proposals • Asking for commitments to RFB from existing patent holders on Baseline technology • Remove technology from Baseline where the patent holders were unwilling to sign on on the RFB • Extensive Studies were performed • Several $100,000 spent in lawyer fees • Extensive technical analysis – nothing evil is left Goal is achieved (so God will) IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum – May 2003 – Geneva, Switzerland

  11. Licensing • Current and future patent holders to select Patent Agency • Several candidates (MPEG-LA, Dolby, at least two more) • Selection made by current (and future?) stakeholders • RFB support by patent agency is a key selection criterion • Baseline will be free, but one needs a license anyway • Evaluation cost has to be low for patents that are only in baseline • Licenses for consumer level product likely below $1.00 • To be competitive w/ MS Media 9 • Provisions for emerging markets, freeware, shareware • Minimum and maximum Caps to facilitate accounting • Likely the killer for MPEG licensing as we know it • MPEG-4: Killing a Zombie??? • Significantly cheaper than MPEG-2 part 2 IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum – May 2003 – Geneva, Switzerland

  12. Performance Video Clip w/ the following characteristics • 640x480 resolution • TeleSuite’s professional, digital, progressive-scan, video-conferencing Camera • 30 fps • Shabby lens :-( • No pre/post-processing (!) • Single DSP implementation for the encoder (TI C6415, 600 MHz) • Encoder and Decoder from UB Video, optimized for high performance in a controlled environment (e.g. ERPS for background restore) • Real-time encoding/decoding (on 1.5 DSPs) • 300 kbit/s video bit rate, 384 kbit/s channel bit rate • Reconstructed Video encoded again using MPEG-4, 6 Mbit/s • So to use the Media Player for easier demonstration IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum – May 2003 – Geneva, Switzerland

  13. IMTC/Wainhouse Research European Forum – May 2003 – Geneva, Switzerland

  14. Thank You Stephan WengerTU Berlin stewe@cs.tu-berlin.de

More Related