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Compression for Great Video and Audio

Master Tips and Common Sense

Ben Waggoner

$110

Paperback

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English
Focal Press
16 November 2009
Learn how to compress video and audio with optimal quality and minimal hassles. Renowned expert Ben Waggoner teaches you to improve the quality of your final content and develop effective workflows. Understand the basic concepts of vision and hearing, apply that knowledge in the context of compression, then move onto practical, applicable information for creating, editing, and compressing the best video and audio, whether you're delivering for the web, DVD, Blu-ray, phones, or beyond.

Clear examples of how to make the best choices in real-world projects

Covers Mac and Windows products for a complete look at today's compression technologies: all the different tools, codecs, and formats for different kinds of deliverables are described, focusing on how to pick the right options for particular projects, players, and sources

Formats

Windows Media

QuickTime

Flash FLV and F4V

MPEG-4 and H.264

MPEG-2

Ogg Vorbis and Theora

Silverlight and Smooth Streaming

Devices

iPod and iPhone

Zune HD

Playstation Portable

Playstation 3

Xbox 360

DVD and Blu-ray

Visit the companion website at http://www.taylorandfrancis.com/cw/waggoner-9780240812137/.

By:  
Imprint:   Focal Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Edition:   2nd edition
Dimensions:   Height: 246mm,  Width: 189mm,  Spine: 30mm
Weight:   1.292kg
ISBN:   9780240812137
ISBN 10:   0240812131
Pages:   632
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  College/higher education ,  Undergraduate ,  Primary
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Chapter 1 Seeing and Hearing; Chapter 2 Uncompressed Video and Audio; Chapter 3 Fundamentals of Compression; Chapter 4 The Digital Video Workflow; Chapter 5 Production, Acquisition, and Post Production; Chapter 6 Preprocessing; Chapter 7 Using Video Codecs; Chapter 8 Using Audio Codecs; Chapter 9 MPEG 1 and 2; Chapter 10 MP3; Chapter 11 MPEG-4; Chapter 12 MPEG-4 part 2 Video Codec; Chapter 13 Advanced Audio Coding (AAC) and M4A; Chapter 14 H.264; Chapter 15 FLV; Chapter 16 Windows Media; Chapter 17 VC-1; Chapter 18 Windows Media Audio; Chapter 19 Ogg; Chapter 20 RealMedia; Chapter 21 Bink; Chapter 22 Web Video; Chapter 23 Optical Disc; Chapter 24 Phones and Devices; Chapter 25 Flash; Chapter 26 Silverlight; Chapter 27 Media on Windows; Chapter 28 QuickTime and Mac OS;

Ben Waggoner has been compressing video for nearly 20 years. He cofounded the pioneering digital media services company Journeyman Digital, launched Terran Interactive's consulting services division, and was principal of Interframe Media. Ben joined Microsoft in 2005, and is now Principal Video Strategist for Microsoft's Silverlight platform.

Reviews for Compression for Great Video and Audio: Master Tips and Common Sense

Praise from 1st edition (Amazon): ***** (5 star) Balance of breadth and depth, October 21, 2004 By half half (Diamond Bar, CA United States) - See all my reviews The author of this book manages to do exactly what he promises, which is to detail the use of a vast number of tools, to generate digital video in countless formats, on innumerable types of media. The possible permutations when all tools, formats, and media are taken together is simply mind-numbing, which is why such a book is necessary in the first place. Any dedicated amateur (or even professional) compressionist needs to know whether there is a better way to do what he or she stumbled across by accident on the vast Internet. This book very clearly describes many of the best combination of tools and strategies to produce the best content possible. The writing style is very fluid and friendly, although I would stop short of calling the book an easy read, because the amount of information is too overwhelming for a straight read; instead, I would use it almost like a reference and jump to a particular chapter to refresh my memory and skills just before undertaking a new compression task. With so much information to write about, I am sure the book was an organizational nightmare for the author, and although he did an overall great job in organizing it, there are still numerous spots where he could have done a better job of introducing a topic before using it to explain other topics. Examples that come to mind: referring to DirectShow without describing it, or creating examples based on video editing tools like Cleaner without first introducing the tool (there are others). All in all, this is a book that Iwill continue to use often. ***** (5 star) MUST HAVE for anyone working in DV Production, November 7, 2002 By James Diefenderfer (Boise, ID United States) - See all my reviews Compression for Great Digital Video Ben Waggoner Full Disclosure: I am not a compressionist nor have I ever met Ben. Although, he has answered more than one of my questions in the COW Cleaner Forum. This book is for compressionists, people who want to be compressionists, and people who on occasion need to pretend they're compressionists (pg. 3). With this clear objective stated up front, Ben opens up and let's his brain pour out over each and every page, all 447 of them. Right from the beginning I was more than a little intimidated and excited at the same time, just from reviewing the Table of Contents. Ben organizes his knowledge into 25 chapters, a glossary, index and a CD-ROM. I will not list all 25 chapters but trust me, if you can think of it Ben covers it. The first section (Chapters 1-11) is about general principles of vision, compression, and how compressed video operates (pg. 3). No matter what compressionist category you think you fall into, you will learn something in these first chapters, even if it turns how to be how much you forgot since grade school. The next section (Chapters 12-24) covers specific video tools and technologies (pg. 3). Ben covers them all and yes, I read them all even the ones that I do not use. Most of the information here I was already formula because when I first started working with Cleaner I studied (yes, studied) the manual. However, now that I have my feet wet the information covered here makes more sense. The last Chapter(Chapter 25) consists of three extensive tutorials that highlight many of the concepts, formats, and tools discussed throughout the book (pg. 3). They cover; Streaming, Progressive Downloading, and Animation for Video Games. So, if your work covers any of these your in luck, if not (such as me) than you may need to read certain Chapters again to pick up what you missed the first time. The CD only contains short snippets of each projects source files. If you'd like the full-length content you will have to order a DVD-ROM from Ben's website. I have to cry foul here, sure you don't need the full-length content to get the point' but no where on the outside of the book does it tell you that you will only get snippets. I mention this for those of you that get angry over thin slim' CD's. Compression for Great Digital Video is an easy and delightful read. It's not very often that you come across a book that covers this much technical information and yet still manages to be clearly understood. Ben fully explains everything that he mentions and often he even provides additional references should you require more information. This book is a MUST HAVE for anyone who find themselves compressing digital video. ***** (5 star) A must have....., October 22, 2002 By danny_london (England, UK) - See all my reviews As somebody who started compressing video - and 2D & 3D animations, a couple of years before Ben, I still found this to be a great book, a good read and well laid out. I'm sure I'll be refering to this book every now and then for a good time to come. ***** (5 star) Must have for all production libraries, November 5, 2007 By Duane Ackerman - See all my reviews This book covers it all in the technical world of content delivery. I wish I had this book much earlier. Even though it is not current in the area of HD, it covers enough ground to make the numerous delivery fomats clear. This book should be required reading for all students of broadcasting.


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