What Is Transcoding?
You've got a file that you want to watch. It's an excellent video, and it's in the exact format that your device supports, so you load it up and start watching. Then you realize that the video is in a form that your device doesn't help, or even worse, it's in a format that your device can't even play. You're stuck with a video that you can't watch! Luckily, there's a solution: transcoding! Transcoding is converting a file from one encoding format to another. It allows the conversion of incompatible data to a better-supported, more modern form of data. Transcoding is often performed if the target device does not support the format or has limited storage capability. Transcoding is often used with video, as the different forms often have different frame rates or resolutions. Quality. It is also used for audio, whereas other formats support different levels of audio quality. Converting a video from one format to another may require significant processing power. As such, it may do it in the background to reduce the load on the device. Transcoding can be either lossless or lossy. Lossless transcoding is used for video conversion from one profile to another or from one resolution to another. Lossy transcoding is used for video conversion from one solution to another. The most popular lossy transcoding profile is Apple's H.264, and the most popular lossless transcoding codec is Google's VP9. Transcoding is the art of turning a format into something else. It's used to make a file that can use on a mobile device or in another Web-enabled product with small screens, lower bandwidth and comparatively less memory. Transcoding is implemented using a proxy server, which receives a file and uses any particular format to change it according to the client.
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