DocumentCode
38914
Title
I. Want. Pixels. (Entering the Age of 4k)
Author
Seeling, Patrick ; Reisslein, Martin
Author_Institution
Dept. of Comput. Sci., Central Michigan Univ., Mount Pleasant, MI, USA
Volume
33
Issue
6
fYear
2014
fDate
Nov.-Dec. 2014
Firstpage
27
Lastpage
30
Abstract
Video has accounted for a large portion of the Internet network traffic in the past and is widely believed to continue to dominate in the foreseeable future. The Cisco Visual Networking Index by Cisco, Inc., for example, predicts that by 2017 more than two thirds of all consumer Internet traffic (including mobile) will be video. This astonishing amount of traffic is driven by the demand for more and more high-resolution media, on one hand, and the continuous improvements of network delivery capabilities allowing for streaming (e.g., a high-resolution video to a smartphone over cellular connections or an ultra-high-resolution video to increasingly affordable connected "smart" televisions). In addition to the capacity increases on the network side, several video coder/ decoders (codecs) have been developed that allow for the efficient compression of video for network delivery or storage on high-capacity optical media. In recent years, we have witnessed a continuous increase in the resolutions that are supported by video codecs and requested by users. Figure 1 illustrates the size differences that are common today, from high-definition (HD) to the cinematic 4k resolutions of video.
Keywords
image resolution; video codecs; video communication; Cisco visual networking index; network delivery; ultrahigh resolution video; video codecs; video coder; video communication; video decoder; Bandwidth; Encoding; Pixels; Streaming media; Video codecs; Video coding;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Potentials, IEEE
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0278-6648
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MPOT.2014.2335793
Filename
6954550
Link To Document