On Monday, Jean-Baptiste Kempf, the president of VideoLAN introduced a new AV1 decoder, named dav1d. This open source decoder aims to be small, fast, maintainable, correctly threaded, and cross-platform.
AV1, short for AOMedia Video 1, is a new royalty-free video coding format designed for video transmissions over the internet. It is being developed by the Alliance for Open Media (AOMedia) composed of most of the important Web companies including YouTube, Google, Facebook, Netflix, Amazon, and Microsoft, among others. Back in September, the YouTube Developers account published a playlist of the first videos to receive AV1 transcodes.
The following are the technical details about dav1d:
Currently, the reference decoder (libaom) for AV1 requires a lot of improvement as it is a research codebase. That is why, the VideoLAN and FFmpeg communities have come together to work on this new decoder, sponsored by the Alliance of Open Media.
This project is partially funded by the Alliance for Open Media/AOM and is supported by TwoOrioles and VideoLabs.
To show the performance improvements that dav1d comes with, the developers compared it with libaom:
You can find the source code of dav1d at VideoLAN website.
Read more about dav1d at Jean-Baptiste Kempf’s website and also watch this presentation at Video Dev Days 2018.
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