CoreAVC for Linux, which was removed from Google after a DMCA takedown notice from CoreCodec, will be coming back. The project provides patches enabling open source media players to use CoreAVC ...
The so-called full HD size (1920 × 1080)H.264 / MPEG-4 AVCWhen I tried to play movies, I was in embarrassment because it made a lot of consequences that it would be funky, dropped, dropped, or not ...
A company has withdrawn an allegation that CoreAVC-for-Linux violates its copyright and now is cooperating with the project, which is hosted at Google Code. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 ...
February 19, 2010 Add as a preferred source on Google Add as a preferred source on Google The newest generation netbooks sport a strong enough CPU/GPU combo to handle HD content, but millions of ...
If you're a Linux fan and a video buff, the chances are you've used the CoreAVC H.264 DirectShow filter created for Windows under Linux using the CoreAVC for Linux package. A DMCA notice from the ...
After caving into a complaint filed against them through the DMCA, Google recently took down the CoreAVC-to-Linux website. The people behind the project were resilient, however, and have fought back.
CoreCodec, the company behind the high-performance CoreAVC H.264 implementation, issued an apology this morning for its recent abuse of the Digital Millennium ...
Google, masters of the internet and the main sponsor of the CoreAVC-for-Linux project, have removed the media codec from their Google Code site after a DMCA complaint from the creators of the original ...
Google has removed an open source project that enables the proprietary CoreAVC high-definition video decoder to run in Linux following a complaint from the codec's developer -- but the project could ...
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