Originally posted by sandy8925
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Intel Gen12/Xe Graphics To Support 12-Bit HEVC/VP9 Decode
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Originally posted by CommunityMember View Post
ATSC 3.0 terrestrial broadcasters are expected to use HEVC. So a bit more than "no one else".
And it's still a small number compared to the huge number of people with internet access who stream videos.
H.265 is a nice codec sure, but thanks to it's messy patent situation, most people aren't going within 10 feet of it.
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Originally posted by sandy8925 View PostOtherwise no one else uses it. Netflix uses VP9 in production, and is already experimenting with AV1. Hotstar has started to use VP9.
Not to mention the UHD Blu-ray spec, which will never support VP9/AV1. HEVC isn't going anywhere anytime soon, because there's already millions of devices that already support it, and the consortum of hardware makers back it, and want the license money to flow
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Originally posted by poeBaer View Post
I think you have that backwards. Anything 4K, Netflix/Amazon/iTunes/AppleTV, are all delivering HEVC (see: litereally any WEB-DL ripped from their services)
Not to mention the UHD Blu-ray spec, which will never support VP9/AV1. HEVC isn't going anywhere anytime soon, because there's already millions of devices that already support it, and the consortum of hardware makers back it, and want the license money to flow
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Intel Rocket Lake-S might provide the biggest upgrade to the mainstream desktop platform in years. Intel Rocket Lake-S gets PCIe 4.0 The platform codenamed Rocket Lake-S is currently expected in late 2020. The rumors about the RLK-S platform have been floating around the web for a while now, but only now (thanks to our sources […]
There is 12 Bit AV1 support not only for HEVC but for AV1 as well in Gen12LP.
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