
KDDI, the company that recently started an online service delivering DVD-quality movies to domestic customers has upped the ante to send quad-HD films down the same pipe.
Although the unnamed technology is still in the labs, KDDI R&D claims it can fit video of the same quality as the Digital Cinema Initiative (DCI) requires into a typical ADSL or fiber-optic internet connection.
To maintain a resolution four times that of standard high definition, DCI video consumes bandwidth at 250Mbps - KDDI’s new version does the same thing at just 20Mbps.
Although that may still be beyond most domestic ADSL subscribers in the West, broadband in Japan is typically anywhere between 50Mbps and 100Mbps, making the new delivery system eminently possible.
The H-264-compliant method relies on working out which parts of an image change most from frame to frame, looking at the colors and movement therein, and then applying the most appropriate compression algorithm.
Although the current prototype uses eight processors to handle the calculations, KDDI is confident such onerous requirements can soon be done away with.
(Crossposted to Tech.co.uk)
Author: Mark Hiratsuka
Home theater | Household | Internet | R&D | Video • Permalink
Tagged with: dci hd tv kddi vod
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