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Video Equipment / Sofware / Technique / Re: H.264 vs Photo-Jpeg - The Ultimate Discussion
« on: August 04, 2017, 02:58 »
hi,
sorry for my late answer, I think h264 is better than JPEG, let us see their differences at first:
H.264 pros/cons
+ reduces bandwidth and storage consumption significantly
+ adaptive video quality based on bandwidth
+ suitable for storage
+ / complexity setup sometimes tricky to set up streaming quality, frame rate and i frame rate. GOP, VBR, CBR etc.
MJPEG pros/cons
+ consistently great image quality
+ robustness, if one frame is dropped, then it does not affect the video
no sound
consumes much more bandwidth and storage
no storage support at angelcam
see more info: https://blog.angelcam.com/what-is-the-difference-between-mjpeg-and-h-264/
by the way, I'd like to say it just aims image instead of video, and H265 is the best format for video, I usually rip my DVD to H265 because of this. http://www.videoconverterfactory.com/tips/dvd-to-h265.html There is a little pull away In conclusion, when it comes to deciding whether to use MJPEG or H.264, it always comes down to what the consumer is looking for and where the camera is being installed. Although H.264 will be the preferred way for many, MJPEG may be a format of choice for those who seek higher quality with crisp details, but cant support the H.264 stream.
sorry for my late answer, I think h264 is better than JPEG, let us see their differences at first:
H.264 pros/cons
+ reduces bandwidth and storage consumption significantly
+ adaptive video quality based on bandwidth
+ suitable for storage
+ / complexity setup sometimes tricky to set up streaming quality, frame rate and i frame rate. GOP, VBR, CBR etc.
MJPEG pros/cons
+ consistently great image quality
+ robustness, if one frame is dropped, then it does not affect the video
no sound
consumes much more bandwidth and storage
no storage support at angelcam
see more info: https://blog.angelcam.com/what-is-the-difference-between-mjpeg-and-h-264/
by the way, I'd like to say it just aims image instead of video, and H265 is the best format for video, I usually rip my DVD to H265 because of this. http://www.videoconverterfactory.com/tips/dvd-to-h265.html There is a little pull away In conclusion, when it comes to deciding whether to use MJPEG or H.264, it always comes down to what the consumer is looking for and where the camera is being installed. Although H.264 will be the preferred way for many, MJPEG may be a format of choice for those who seek higher quality with crisp details, but cant support the H.264 stream.