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Firefox 33 support H.264 video codec only partially

  • 6 பதிலளிப்புகள்
  • 2 இந்த பிரச்னைகள் உள்ளது
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  • Last reply by cor-el

From the current version 33 Firefox officially supports the proprietary and licensed video codec H.264. Which was providing through cooperation with the network specialist Cisco, the OpenH264 as a free codec plug-in possible.

Since the features are not yet fully developed, it uses the browser initially only for WebRTC , the standard for video and audio chat in real time. No support is the native playback of H.264 web video with the video tag.

Your cooperation agreed Mozilla and Cisco already a year ago. Cisco made ??H.264 open source , released him with an open-source license and expressly promised not to want to pass on the cost of its own MPEG-LA license for the module.

Mozilla pulls completely open codec before and still support the development of alternatives such as H.264 Daala. "The Web is an open ecosystem, generally free of proprietary control and technologies - video except", Mozilla's Chief Technology Officer Andreas Gal expresses his regret in a blog post from. "Unfortunately, not a royalty-free codec won enough spread to be a serious competitor for H.264. Mozilla will continue to support the video format VP8, but we have the impression that VP8 has not been able to find enough spread to replace H.264 can. "The Firefox users is therefore best served by a video codec in WebRTC which ensures the highest possible interoperability.

From the current version 33 Firefox officially supports the proprietary and licensed video codec H.264. Which was providing through cooperation with the network specialist Cisco, the OpenH264 as a free codec plug-in possible. Since the features are not yet fully developed, it uses the browser initially only for WebRTC , the standard for video and audio chat in real time. No support is the native playback of H.264 web video with the video tag. Your cooperation agreed Mozilla and Cisco already a year ago. Cisco made ??H.264 open source , released him with an open-source license and expressly promised not to want to pass on the cost of its own MPEG-LA license for the module. Mozilla pulls completely open codec before and still support the development of alternatives such as H.264 Daala. "The Web is an open ecosystem, generally free of proprietary control and technologies - video except", Mozilla's Chief Technology Officer Andreas Gal expresses his regret in a blog post from. "Unfortunately, not a royalty-free codec won enough spread to be a serious competitor for H.264. Mozilla will continue to support the video format VP8, but we have the impression that VP8 has not been able to find enough spread to replace H.264 can. "The Firefox users is therefore best served by a video codec in WebRTC which ensures the highest possible interoperability.

All Replies (6)

I'm not sure whether you have a question. ??

You can read Andreas Gal's blog post here: http://andreasgal.com/2014/10/14/openh264-now-in-firefox/

If you want to propose a change in Firefox, you can use the Feedback page here: https://input.mozilla.org/feedback

jscher2000 said

I'm not sure whether you have a question. ?? You can read Andreas Gal's blog post here: http://andreasgal.com/2014/10/14/openh264-now-in-firefox/ If you want to propose a change in Firefox, you can use the Feedback page here: https://input.mozilla.org/feedback

Sonny65 மூலமாக திருத்தப்பட்டது

I have the latest version of FF and all add-ons are up to date; which includes Shockwave; but I just noticed this as a new add-on: Cisco’s H.264 Codec. It is always active, but not sure when it was added. Could this be the culprit? Win XP/Home 2002 SP3, Comcast ISP,

Hi Sonny65, the new plugin is used in a limited range of circumstances but you can disable it (set it to "Never Activate") to see whether that makes any difference with whatever you are experiencing.

That was my first thought but wasn't sure if would adversely effect FF. I'll run like that for a while and get back to you on how it goes. Have a Merry Christmas with you family.

Note that you can remove the plugin from showing on the about:addons page by toggling the media.gmp-gmpopenh264.provider.enabled pref to false on the about:config page.