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The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
bykindbud ( 90044 ) writes:
Really? Why does the HTML5 spec care what codecs are used? Why doesn't it just provide a way to specify which codec the author used to encode the media file, and let the browser prompt the user to get it if needed?
byCurate ( 783077 ) writes:
Indeed, as was done for pictures using the tag. HTML didn't specify a particular file format. You could use .bmp, .ico, .gif, .jpg, etc. Why on Earth would you WANT to standardize on a particular file format and lose that flexibility? Better file formats will show up over time and certainly you'd like to be able to use tem. The good formats will stick and become de facto standards. The not so good formats will fall by the wayside.
byJCSoRocks ( 1142053 ) writes:
Because you end up with the craptastic situation like IE6 where they sort of support PNG but not really because they don't support transparency. If there isn't universal browser support for a format it might as well not even exist / be an option because you can't use it. If you have to code for IE6 you can't use transparent PNGs can you? So what difference does it make that you can "use any format?"
If we go this route with video what options are left? Stick with flash? Encode everything in two different c
byweicco ( 645927 ) writes:
Img-tag doesn't specify which image formats you must or must not use so I really don't understand why video-tag should be any different. Video-tag could just instruct the browser that "put the video in here and fetch stream from here or if user has no ability to play the video display whatever is inside the alt-attribute".
So when browser sees video-tag it renders it by using which ever video plugin or built-in mechanism is in use, be it Flash, Silverlight, Windows Media Player or whatever. Then it is up to browser vendors to offer mechanism to download, install and/or configure video player and/or codec to the browser. No need to force the whole world behind a single format.
Just my uneducated opinion. I don't know much about video codecs.
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byRonald Dumsfeld ( 723277 ) writes:
No, you don't know much about video codecs - or the browser wars.
The huge headache everyone wants to avoid is content providers having to code around, and store duplicate copies of video, to cater to all the browsers.
This is before you get into all the bullshit about codecs that are really rootkits and the like. You do not want your browser saying, "I cannot cope with the computationally intensive task to render this video without 'magic software' from goatse.cx".
byJCSoRocks ( 1142053 ) writes:
The huge headache everyone wants to avoid is content providers having to code around, and store duplicate copies of video, to cater to all the browsers.
My point exactly.
Besides, WTF is the point of a standard if the people making the standard are just following whatever the browsers are already doing? Why even bother pretending like we've got a standard that everyone follows?
byweicco ( 645927 ) writes:
You are probably right but still it doesn't sound good. I've always thought that versatility is acknoledged to be a good thing. Now everyone is tied up to a single video codec. What happens to the development? Is it held back like at the time when it was said that IE was holding back the WWW (because of the lack of competition)? Or do we open up the spec when there's a better codec around? As a programmer, this is what I detest, changing the spec ;)
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