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YouTube and Netflix Upload AV1-Encoded Videos for Testing

Accepted submission by takyon at 2018-09-15 00:01:48
Software

YouTube, Netflix Publish First Videos Transcoded Using AV1 [anandtech.com]

YouTube has uploaded about a dozen videos that were transcoded using the AV1 codec, which was introduced earlier this year. The test sequences are expected to give Google as well as developers of browsers, decoders, and encoders an understanding how to better use the new royalty-free codec. Netflix is also testing AV1 codec and offers everyone a video in different resolutions and featuring various color depth.

To date, YouTube has added 14 videos transcoded using the AV1 codec [anandtech.com] to a special playlist [youtube.com]. The list includes various types of content, including a talking-head program, musical clips, action videos, and demo footages from RED and Blackmagic Design. YouTube says that this type of content represents a large share of videos hosted by the service, so it makes a lot of sense for the company to learn how they behave on various devices in terms of performance, power consumption, and overall stability.

At present, AV1 support is available only in those Chrome 70 and Firefox Nightly builds released after September 12th. Meanwhile, the test videos use AV1 for resolutions that are lower than 480p, underscoring the fact that they are meant to test decoders that, for the moment, are going to be anything but optimized. This is on top of the fact that at the moment there are no hardware decoders that support AV1, so everything is being handled in software by the CPU to begin with. Eventually the codec will be used for content in 4K+ ultra-high-def resolutions, along with HDR and wide color gamuts.

Netflix video [netflix.com].

Also at 9to5Google [9to5google.com]:

Users on Chrome 70 [9to5google.com] and Firefox Nightly builds after September 13th can test it by making sure media.av1.enabled and media.mediasource.experimental.enabled prefs are set.

chrome://flags/#enable-av1-decoder

Once running a supported browser, users can head to YouTube's TestTube experiments list [youtube.com] and select "'Prefer AV1 for SD."

Related: VLC 3.0.0 Released, With Better Hardware Decoding and Support for HDR, 360-Degree Video, Chromecast [soylentnews.org]
Alliance for Open Media Announces Release of AOMedia Video Codec 1.0 (AV1) Specification [soylentnews.org]


Original Submission