VC-1 is the informal name of the SMPTE 421M video codec standard, which was initially developed as a proprietary video format by Microsoft before it was released as a formal SMPTE standard video format on April 3, 2006. It is today a widely supported standard found in HD DVDs, Blu-ray Discs, Windows Media Video 9, Slingbox, and Microsoft's Silverlight framework.
Format
VC-1 is an evolution of the conventional
DCT-based video codec design also found in
H.261,
H.263,
MPEG-1,
MPEG-2, and
MPEG-4 Part 2. It is widely characterized as an alternative to the latest
ITU-T and
MPEG video codec standard known as
H.264/MPEG-4 AVC. VC-1 contains coding tools for
interlaced video sequences as well as
progressive encoding. The main goal of VC-1 development and standardization is to support the compression of interlaced content without first converting it to progressive, making it more attractive to broadcast and video industry professionals.
Although widely considered to be Microsoft’s product, there are actually fifteen companies in the VC-1 patent pool (as of August 17, 2006). As an SMPTE standard, VC-1 is open to implementation by anyone, although implementers are hypothetically required to pay licensing fees to the MPEG LA, LLC licensing body or directly to its members, who claim to hold essential patents on the format (since it is a non-exclusive licensing body).
Both HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc have adopted VC-1 as a video standard, meaning their video playback devices will be capable of decoding and playing video-content compressed using VC-1. Windows Vista partially supports HD DVD playback by including the VC-1 decoder and some related components needed for playback of VC-1 encoded HD DVD movies.
Microsoft has designated VC-1 as the Xbox 360 video game console’s official video format, and game developers may use VC-1 for full motion video included with games. By means of an October 31, 2006 update, people can now play all formats of Windows Media Video on the Xbox 360 from a disc, USB storage device, or streaming from their PC via Windows Media Connect/Windows Media Player 11. This allows anyone to play VC-1 encoded files on the console.
VC-1 is also supported in the PlayStation 3 console and the FFmpeg project includes a free VC-1 decoder.
Microsoft codec implementations
The VC-1 codec specification has so far been implemented by Microsoft in the form of 3 codecs, each identified with a unique
four character code.
WMV3
Simple and Main Profiles of VC-1 remained completely faithful to the existing WMV3 implementation, making WMV3 bitstreams fully VC-1 compliant.
The WMV3 codec was designed to primarily support progressive encoding for computer displays. An interlaced encoding mode was implemented, but quickly became deprecated when Microsoft started implementing WMV Advanced Profile. Whereas WMV3 progressive encoding was implemented in the color space, the deprecated interlaced mode was implemented in the less common color space.
The Windows Media Video 9 (WMV3) codec implements the Simple and Main modes of the VC-1 codec standard, providing high-quality video for streaming and downloading. "It provides support for a wide range of bit rates, from high-definition content at one-half to one-third the bit rate of MPEG-2, to low-bit-rate Internet video delivered over a dial-up modem. This codec also supports professional-quality downloadable video with two-pass and variable bit rate (VBR) encoding. Windows Media Video 9 is already supported by a wide variety of players and devices."
A number of high definition movies and videos have been released commercially in a format dubbed WMV HD. These titles are encoded with WMV3 Main Profile @ High Level (MP@HL).
WMVA
WMVA was the original implementation of WMV Advanced Profile prior to the acceptance of the VC-1 draft by SMPTE. The codec was distributed with
Windows Media Player 10 and Windows Media Format SDK 9.5 install packages. There are slight bitstream differences between WMVA and WVC1, so consequently WMVA is handled by a different
DirectShow decoder than WVC1. Some 3rd party hardware and software decoders only decode WMVA based content. As of 2006, WMVA is considered a deprecated codec because it is not fully VC-1 compliant.
WVC1
WVC1, also known as Windows Media Video 9 Advanced Profile, implements a more recent and fully compliant Advanced Profile of the VC-1 codec standard. It offers support for interlaced content and is transport independent. With the previous version of the Windows Media Video 9 Series codec, users could deliver progressive content at data rates as low as one-third that of the MPEG-2 codec and still get equivalent or comparable quality to MPEG-2. The Windows Media Video 9 Advanced Profile codec also offers this same improvement in encoding efficiency with interlaced contents. A decoder for WVC1 is included in
Windows Media Player 11, which is bundled with Windows Vista and is available as a download for Windows XP. This implementation is supported in
Microsoft Silverlight.
Profiles
Bit rates and resolutions
Other implementations
Due to its origins in Microsoft's WMV9 codec, the most popular implementations of VC-1 encoders have so far been done by Microsoft, though third-party implementations exist as well. Sonic Cinevision PSE, a professional VC-1 encoding tool used predominantly in
HD DVD and
Blu-ray encoding, is a commercial version of Microsoft's PEP (Parallel Encoder) encoding tool and VC-1 Analyzer tool. Microsoft owns the code development whereas
Sonic Solutions owns the sales and distribution. Microsoft also provides a separate VC-1 Encoder SDK which allows any company or software developer to integrate VC-1 encoding into their applications.
Non-Microsoft VC-1 implementations (based entirely on the SMPTE specifications) have been done by
Tandberg Television,
MainConcept and
Enciris Technologies. The
FFmpeg project includes a
free VC-1 decoder.
Encoding software
Windows Media Encoder 9 Series encodes VC-1 compliant video files, including WVC1
FourCC media. Windows Media Format 11 Runtime or Windows Media Player 11 must be installed on the computer to ensure full VC-1 compliance across all three profiles (Simple, Main and Advanced). If either of these are installed,
Windows Movie Maker can also save VC-1 compliant videos, as can any other application built on the Windows Media Format SDK or Windows Media Codec DMOs. A Windows Media Encoder Studio Edition was initially announced for professional encoding but later cancelled by Microsoft.
Microsoft Expression Encoder which is part of
Expression Media and
Expression Studio is aimed at encoding VC-1 (WMV9 Advanced Profile) video for
Silverlight streaming.
Hardware-based encoding and decoding
Because VC-1 encoding and decoding requires significant computing power, software implementation that run on a general-purpose CPU are typically slow, especially when dealing with
HD video content. To reduce CPU usage or to do real-time encoding, special-purpose hardware may be employed, either for the complete encoding or decoding process, or for acceleration assistance within a CPU-controlled environment.
A hardware VC-1 encoder can be an ASIC or an FPGA.
Benefits of video compression
For companies that rely on gathering and storing vast amounts of video data such as hospitals, video security firms, film & TV producers etc, compressing video files drastically reduces the amount of hard disk computer data storage space required and this delivers large cost savings. 1 second of RGB uncompressed 1080/25p (full HD PAL) video requires 155 MBytes of data storage, where as a compressed VC-1 video file will typically require 150 times less storage at 1MByte.
See also
Comparison of H.264 and VC-1
Video Compression
References
External links
VC-1 reference software analysis at the MultimediaWiki
RFC 4425 – IETF RTP Payload Format for Video Codec 1
Category:Video codecs
Category:Microsoft initiatives