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MOBIMEDIA 2010
C2POWER 2010EERT 2010SVCVISION 2010
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    SVCVISION

    Impact of Scalable Video Coding on Multimedia Provisioning

    Scalable Video Coding (SVC) refers to the possibility of removing certain parts of a video bit stream in order to adapt it to a changing usage environment, e.g., end device capabilities, network condition or user preferences. SVC has been an active standardization and research area for at least 20 …

    Scalable Video Coding (SVC) refers to the possibility of removing certain parts of a video bit stream in order to adapt it to a changing usage environment, e.g., end device capabilities, network condition or user preferences. SVC has been an active standardization and research area for at least 20 years, reaching back to H.262/MPEG-2, which offered scalable profiles. However, these previous attempts suffered from a significant loss in coding efficiency as well as a large increase in decoder complexity (and thus energy consumption), which hindered market adoption. Only the most recent attempt, i.e., the SVC extension of H.264/AVC, focuses on avoiding these disadvantages. Since H.264/SVC standardization started in 2003, it has been at the focus of many multimedia research groups.

    Today’s increasing variety of end devices (smart phones, tablet PCs, Netbooks, Laptops, PCs, networked HDTVs, …) and the associated multitude of Internet connectivity options (GPRS/EDGE, UMTS, ADSL, PLC, WiMAX, …) provide particular momentum for SVC, which can be easily and pervasively adapted to these various usage environments. SVC also allows end devices to only decode a sub-set of the SVC bit stream, thus enabling in particular mobile end devices to minimize the necessary (processing) power requirements.

    This workshop aims to provide a forum for both academic and industrial participants to exchange and discuss recent advancements and future perspectives of SVC.

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    Editor(s): Jonathan Rodriguez (Campus Universitário de Santiago), Rahim Tafazolli (The University of Surrey) and Christos Verikoukis (Parc Mediterrani de la Tecnologia (PMT))
    Publisher
    Springer
    Conference dates
    6th–8th Sep 2010
    Location
    Lisbon, Portugal
    Appeared in EUDL
    2012-02-03

    Copyright © 2012–2025 ICST

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    Showing 1–10 of 11 results
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    • Adaptively Optimized Error Protection for H.264 Scalable Video Coding

      Research Article in Impact of Scalable Video Coding on Multimedia Provisioning

      Bin Zhang, Mathias Wien
    • Distortion-Energy Analysis of an OMAP-Based H.264/SVC Decoder

      Research Article in Impact of Scalable Video Coding on Multimedia Provisioning

      Eduardo Juárez, Fernando Pescador, Pedro Lobo, Angel Groba, César Sanz
    • Efficient SVC-to-AVC Conversion at a Media Aware Network Element

      Research Article in Impact of Scalable Video Coding on Multimedia Provisioning

      Michael Sablatschan, Jordi Murillo, Michael Ransburg, Hermann Hellwagner
    • Impact of Slice Size for SVC Coding Efficiency and Error Resilience

      Research Article in Impact of Scalable Video Coding on Multimedia Provisioning

      Mikko Uitto, Janne Vehkaperä, Peter Amon
    • Multi-interface Streaming of Scalable Video

      Research Article in Impact of Scalable Video Coding on Multimedia Provisioning

      Tiia Sutinen, Jouni Knuutinen, Markus Luoto
    • Scalable Video Coding Impact on Networks

      Research Article in Impact of Scalable Video Coding on Multimedia Provisioning

      Michael Ransburg, Eduardo Graciá, Tiia Sutinen, Jordi Murillo, Michael Sablatschan, Hermann Hellwagner
    • Sending the Right Signals: How to Deal with the Lack of Signaling with RTP/RTCP for H.264 SVC

      Research Article in Impact of Scalable Video Coding on Multimedia Provisioning

      Henrik Lundin, Patrik Westin
    • Simulation Platform for Fast Video Quality Evaluation of H.264/AVC and SVC Transmission on Error Prone Channels

      Research Article in Impact of Scalable Video Coding on Multimedia Provisioning

      Robert Skupin, Cornelius Hellge, Karsten Grüneberg, Thomas Schierl, Thomas Wiegand
    • Analysis of H.264/AVC Scalable Video Coding for Video Delivery to Heterogeneous Terminals

      Research Article in Impact of Scalable Video Coding on Multimedia Provisioning

      Thomas Rusert, Rickard Sjöberg, Clinton Priddle
    • Fast H.264/AVC-to-SVC Transcoding in a Mobile Television Environment

      Research Article in Impact of Scalable Video Coding on Multimedia Provisioning

      Glenn Wallendael, Sebastiaan Leuven, Rosario Garrido-Cantos, Jan Cock, José Martínez, Peter Lambert, Pedro Cuenca, Rik Walle
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