Posted by admin / Under Theora
Firefox chose to support the Ogg Theora video format for HTML5 video. If you're extremely desperate to watch HTML5 YouTube videos but you absolutely do not want to switch to another browser, you've got one simple-yet-absurd solution that'll only work on Windows...
Published on Wednesday 10th of March 2010 03:08:56 PM
continue reading
Posted by admin / Under Theora
The Ogg container format is being promoted by the Xiph Foundation for use with its Vorbis and Theora codecs. Unfortunately, a number of technical shortcomings in the format render it ill-suited to most, if not all, use cases. This article examines the most severe of these flaws.
Published on Wednesday 10th of March 2010 03:08:56 PM
continue reading
Posted by admin / Under Theora
Convert media into Theora format using VLC Media Player - prepare for HTML 5 audio and HTML 5 video
Published on Wednesday 10th of March 2010 03:08:56 PM
continue reading
Posted by admin / Under Theora
Many web browsers introduced support for the HTML 5 audio and video elements, providing the easy way to add media into HTML pages. At the moment, Ogg Theora
Published on Wednesday 10th of March 2010 03:08:56 PM
continue reading
Posted by admin / Under Theora
Internet Explorer, HTML 5 web standardındaki video formatı "Ogg Theora"yı tanımıyor. Bu yüzden geliştirici Cristian Adam, Microsoft tarayıcısı için tam da bu işi gören bir eklenti geliştirdi
Published on Wednesday 10th of March 2010 03:08:56 PM
continue reading
Posted by admin / Under Theora
Gmail stutters, a phony version of Microsoft Security Essentials makes the rounds, Opera 10.5 beta comes to Macs, and video codecs Ogg Theora and H.264 go head to head.
Published on Wednesday 10th of March 2010 03:08:56 PM
continue reading
Posted by admin / Under Theora
A streaming video consultant has conducted a hands-on comparison of Ogg Theora and h264. His findings show that Theora still lags on quality at low bitrates.
Published on Wednesday 10th of March 2010 03:08:56 PM
continue reading
Posted by admin / Under Theora
Byzanz is a pretty cool command line screencast application which lets you record the desktop session as a GIF image, Theora video and others. Earlier releases only had the option to save the session as a GIF image but recent releases also allow recording the session as a video. Audio recording is also supported.
Published on Wednesday 10th of March 2010 03:08:56 PM
continue reading
Share this!