Xvid is a MPEG-4 video codec for PC. Its purpose is to compress video in order to allow for faster transmission over computer networks or for more efficient storage on computer disks. Hence, Xvid can somewhat be seen as a ZIP for video. Xvid removes information from video that is not important for human perception in order to achieve very high compression rates while still keeping very good visual quality. As an example: uncompressed digital video is huge and takes up about 100 GB HD space per hour at PAL resolution. The same video would require just 500 MB per hour when compressed with Xvid at high quality. So Xvid can compress video at ratios of 200:1 and more.
A big advantage of Xvid compressed video files is that they play almost anywhere. The Xvid software runs on many platforms and most popular video players support it. Also, home entertainment devices like TVs or DVD/BD players can handle Xvid video.
XviD Codec 1.3.5 changelog:
Xvidcore library
- AmigaOS build patch by Fredrik Wikstrom
- Support for applevel multithreading mode also for AVI output in xvid_encraw
- Set interlacing flag in decoder correctly
VFW frontend
- Re-add support to decode raw YV12 input FourCC video
- Fix: Produce debug output only when debug option is enabled
DShow/MFT frontend
- Fixed bug in thumbnail creation on Windows 7
- Fix output buffer stride calculation in MFT
- Setting interlaced flags on output pins correctly in DirectShow and MFT
- Corrected pixel aspect ratio support in MFT
Download: XviD 1.3.5 | 11.3 MB (Open Source)
View: XviD Home Page