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- Newsgroups: comp.multimedia
- Path: sparky!uunet!europa.asd.contel.com!darwin.sura.net!jvnc.net!nj.nec.com!zilla
- From: zilla@ccrl.nj.nec.com (John Lewis)
- Subject: Re: MPEG for Mac?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.044659.20075@research.nj.nec.com>
- Sender: news@research.nj.nec.com
- Organization: C&C Research Labs, NEC USA, Princeton, N.J.
- References: <1992Nov14.233249.10301@nlm.nih.gov>
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 92 04:46:59 GMT
- Lines: 29
-
- I have not heard of any MPEG hardware for the mac.
-
- R.e. the MPEG for Windows, I'm fairly sure that it's not what it seems:
- this software almost certainly decompresses from disk into memory,
- and then plays back from memory. Current processors are not fast
- enough to do JPEG in real time, and I don't think MPEG-1 is any
- near possible either.
-
- + This means that this "mpeg" is limited by the total amount of memory.
- Thus, the total length of the movie is limited (and some trade-off
- of movie length vs resolution vs frame-rate). It is thus
- somewhat inferior to software-only quicktime, which is not
- limited in length, only in size/rate.
-
- The closest thing to real MPEG in any commerical products are the
- JPEG-based Quicktime accelerators that are beginning to appear. These
- can do 640x480x24bit recording and playback at 30 frames/sec,
- *at some level of quality* (possibly no better than vhs).
- SuperMac's digital film ($6000) and RasterOps MoviePak ($2000
- daughterboard) are the first two such products.
-
- A recent MacWeek article said that one quicktime hardware accelerator
- was used to produce a 1/2 hour show for public television in LA.
- They claimed broadcast quality using an 8:1 compression ratio.
- The show fit on 4G of disk.
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