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Report: RealVideo Beats Out WMV, Flash, Apple's H.264

by , 2:40 PM EST, February 27th, 2006

StreamingMedia.com on Monday published "Proprietary Streaming Codecs, 2006," a research report that compares RealVideo and Windows Media with Flash and Apple's H.264 codec, which lies at the heart of QuickTime 7. The report found that RealVideo was the best of the group, with Windows Media starting to fall behind its top competitor.

"With Microsoft's recent success in standards bodies, we expected quality to be at or near the top," report author Jan Ozer said in a statement, "but usually it was at or near the bottom. Companies using or considering Windows Media really need to evaluate other technologies."

Ms. Ozer also found that while Flash and H.264 have been heavily touted as superior solutions, their quality also trails RealVideo. She noted that the two challengers have seen "impressive" progress, however.

To research her 118-page report, which sells for US$295, Ms. Ozer created a six-minute file that contained 38 scenes of business, sports and entertainment videos, as well as several animations and still image pans and zooms. The files were encoded by Apple, Microsoft and RealNetworks and then analyzed in five different playback configurations: modem, 3GPP, 100Kbps, 300Kbps and 500Kbps.

Observer Comments

Show: Subjects Only | Full Comments
Close Name:Wings Posts: 89 Joined: 30 Mar 2004
Subject: Well What Was This 6-minute File Encoded In?

That's quite a trick, to be able to create a file that contains video from 3 different and incompatible vendors. If it is indeed one 6-minute file that contains 38 scenes from the 3 vendors, does not the encoding technique of the composite video come into play when determining the original video quality? I would think that whatever the 6-minute file was encoded with, it may do better RE-encoding one vendors' video than another.

Close Name:Guest
Subject:

Yup! They used wichever works best for Real! Who would want to use the bloated adware that is RealPlayer though?

Close Name:Guest
Subject: Re: Wings

I don't think you read the aricle carefully enough...

Close Name:Al Swearengen Posts: 339 Joined: 10 May 2005
Subject: I am not buying it

Quote
Guest wrote:
I don't think you read the aricle carefully enough...


I am not buying the article, not for $295, and I would have to see Jan's comparisons before making a decision as to agree or not.

From what I see it is more a problem with the person preparing the video for the web than the codec used. It seems to me that download speed is more important than quality.



Last edited by Al Swearengen on Mon Feb 27, 2006 5:55 pm; edited 2 times in total
Reply | Quote
Close Name:Guest
Subject: PeeCee Zealot?

Firstly, Jan is a guy, not a Ms. I would be interested in finding out how exactly Jan decoded the material - if it was with a Windows box, I can see that both Real and Microsoft may have put hooks into the system to speed up decoding.

Anyway, Jan is a long time Windows supporter, having made money for over 10 years writing about digital video on the Windows platform for PC Magazine <http://digitalmedianetwork.sonic.com/index.php?action=news&id=7> . He sees absolutely no problems with single source, proprietary standards. Whether or not MPEG4 is faster or slower, it was developed by a standards committe and has a better chance of being non-proprietary than either WMP or RealPlayer. Of course, as they say, when you can't do it, teach - while Jan has been evangelizing video production on the Windows platform, thousands of Mac users have actually been producing content.

Close Name:deasys Posts: 296 Joined: 08 Apr 2003
Subject:

Unbelievably stupid!

I guess both the HD DVD and Blu-Ray groups made a big mistake when they chose H.264 for the next generation DVDs.

I guess DirecTV and Dish Network did too because they both chose H.264 as their next encoding standard.

Golly, maybe Jan Ozer should make an emergency plea to those organizations to get them to adopt Real's 'superior' codec. That would hardly make him look any more foolish than he already does...

Close Name:Guest
Subject:

Quote
deasys wrote:
Unbelievably stupid!

I guess both the HD DVD and Blu-Ray groups made a big mistake when they chose H.264 for the next generation DVDs.

I guess DirecTV and Dish Network did too because they both chose H.264 as their next encoding standard.

Golly, maybe Jan Ozer should make an emergency plea to those organizations to get them to adopt Real's 'superior' codec. That would hardly make him look any more foolish than he already does...


You are right. After spending hundreds of millions of dollars over several years to reach this decision, they must have all made huge mistakes.
However, after a few weeks of selling his report, Jan has already made more money than the Blu-Ray group.

Close Name:Guest
Subject: Confusing us cats

In a subsidiary study, the group also attempted to compare streaming and non-streaming video and discovered that streaming was incomparable rubbish. The study found streaming video was only useful for preventing users from saving a copy, although ironically, accounting for this benefit resulted in more lost points for streaming, as it meant the video was less usable.

"I guess both the HD DVD and Blu-Ray groups made a big mistake when they chose H.264 for the next generation DVDs."
Rest easy. Mpeg4 will continue to be the standard for basically everything (DVDs, digital TV, web, phones, iPods, etc) and H.264 will remain one of the best Mpeg4 codecs. The report is on *streaming* video. Let's not confuse laser printers with fax machines

What I'd like to know is which proprietary architecture produces the best *open* Mpeg4 files. (You know - the video files ending in ".mp4" that are player independent, ex. create it with QuickTime, play it with anything.)

Close Name:Jan Ozer Posts: 1 Joined: 28 Feb 2006
Subject: StreamingMedia.com report

Couple of comments on the comments.

1. I created one test file with 38 different scenes in DV format. Microsoft, Real and Apple encoded the files into five profiles from 56 kbps to 500 kbps. I created the Flash files. I compared the files side by side using four criteria, still frame quality, motion quality, smoothness (dropped frames) and color quality. Buyers of the reports can download all video files, all still frame comparison files and all figures and draw their own conclusions.

2. I assessed quality only, and only up to 500 kbps. Folks choosing the HD and HD DVD standards looked at much higher data rates and factors other than quality. My target reader is making decisions regarding streaming, not HD DVD or satellite.

Jan Ozer

Close Name:Guest
Subject: Video

For $295.00 a copy who in the world would buy such a report noting that one's opinion about "Real Media" technology is better than what is being introduced by big time consumer vendors. Also, was your testing done in a controlled environment or was it done at Real's Lab and if the report is undeniably true and correct why not make a statement to the world and make your report free so everyone can read it and test and hopefully agree with you because $295.00 a copy is a lot to disagree on.

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