Meeting the Challenge of Real-Time Video Encoding: Migrating From H.263 to H.264
H.264 is a new standard for improved real-time video encoding. It provides better compression of video images, in part by using variable, small block sizes for motion compensation. This is, however, more computationally intensive, with 41 motion vectors for each one in H.263. Asish Thanawala and Bruce McNamara of Stretch, discuss how to move from H.263 to H.264 without a complete system redesign.
Click here to read more ....
Related Semiconductor IP
- LPDDR6/5X/5 PHY V2 - Intel 18A-P
- ML-KEM Key Encapsulation & ML-DSA Digital Signature Engine
- MIPI SoundWire I3S Peripheral IP
- ML-DSA Digital Signature Engine
- P1619 / 802.1ae (MACSec) GCM/XTS/CBC-AES Core
Related Articles
- How Low Can You Go? Pushing the Limits of Transistors - Deep Low Voltage Enablement of Embedded Memories and Logic Libraries to Achieve Extreme Low Power
- The Challenge of Automotive Hardware Security Deployment
- Last-Time Buy Notifications For Your ASICs? How To Make the Most of It
- Handling the Challenges of Building HPC Systems We Need
Latest Articles
- FPGA-Accelerated RISC-V ISA Extensions for Efficient Neural Network Inference on Edge Devices
- MultiVic: A Time-Predictable RISC-V Multi-Core Processor Optimized for Neural Network Inference
- AnaFlow: Agentic LLM-based Workflow for Reasoning-Driven Explainable and Sample-Efficient Analog Circuit Sizing
- FeNN-DMA: A RISC-V SoC for SNN acceleration
- Multimodal Chip Physical Design Engineer Assistant