Bruce’s Shorts | 4.20 – How to Choose a Video Codec

Choosing a professional video codec is tricky. Whether you want H.264, JPEG2000 or Perseus you need to understand the complex commercial and business compromises involved. In this short video Bruce Devlin highlights some of the issues that you need to consider..

Choosing a video codec requires serious thought as to how you measure the benefits of a codec. This is not which vendor to choose, but which codec is the best choice for your application. Take three examples.

1. In the UK, industry body the Digital Production Partnership (DPP) needed a specification for files for the exchange of content between broadcasters and their suppliers. They stipulated that the codec and its wrapper must be a recognized standard, the codec must be easily available on reasonable terms, and from more than one supplier.

2. Some video encoding is for archives like the U.S. Library of Congress. A mathematically lossless codec may be a requirement. How long does it take to encode, what compute resources does it need, what is the operational cost? What is the longevity of the standard?

3. Mobile devices like smartphones and tablets are used more and more to consume video. For this application bandwidth efficiency is key to codec choice. However, just as important is the need for low power consumption for the player application.

Choosing a codec is not just a technical decision, there are business economics that must be considered.  A standarized codec is the usual choice, but in a fast-moving world, other choices may be more suited to the business applicaton.

Click and view Bruce's succinct roundup of the issues.


Bruce Short's are released every two weeks on the Broadcast Bridge, with a wide range of topics around the issues of advancing technology in the media sector.

You might also like...

Next-Gen 5G Contribution: Part 2 - MEC & The Disruptive Potential Of 5G

The migration of the core network functionality of 5G to virtualized or cloud-native infrastructure opens up new capabilities like MEC which have the potential to disrupt current approaches to remote production contribution networks.

Next-Gen 5G Contribution: Part 1 - The Technology Of 5G

5G is a collection of standards that encompass a wide array of different use cases, across the entire spectrum of consumer and commercial users. Here we discuss the aspects of it that apply to live video contribution in broadcast production.

NAB Show 2024 BEIT Sessions Part 2: New Broadcast Technologies

The most tightly focused and fresh technical information for TV engineers at the NAB Show will be analyzed, discussed, and explained during the four days of BEIT sessions. It’s the best opportunity on Earth to learn from and question i…

Standards: Part 6 - About The ISO 14496 – MPEG-4 Standard

This article describes the various parts of the MPEG-4 standard and discusses how it is much more than a video codec. MPEG-4 describes a sophisticated interactive multimedia platform for deployment on digital TV and the Internet.

The Big Guide To OTT: Part 9 - Quality Of Experience (QoE)

Part 9 of The Big Guide To OTT features a pair of in-depth articles which discuss how a data driven understanding of the consumer experience is vital and how poor quality streaming loses viewers.