Making the Raspberry Pi affordable involved some tough calls, such as the omission of MPEG-2 decoding. Certification costs alone for that video software might have increased the board's cost by roughly 10 %. Now, after many make media centers using the hardware, the building blocks behind the project has made a strategy to add some missing codec. For $3.16, customers can buy a person MPEG-2 license for all of their boards around the organization's online shop. A fan of Microsoft's VC-1 standard Privileges to presenting Redmond's codec could be bought for $1.58. H.264 encoding can also be within the cards since OpenMax components required to develop programs using the functionality are actually enabled automatically within the device's latest firmware. With CEC support tossed in to the Raspbmc, XBian and OpenELEC os's, just one IR remote can control a Raspberry Pi, a TV along with other connected devices. If you are prepared to stock up your Pi using its newly found capabilities, go to the source link below.
Update: The Raspberry Pi Foundation tell us that US clients will not need to pay florida sales tax, meaning patrons are only challenge $3.16 for MPEG-2 and $1.58 for VC-1 support, not $3.79 and $1.90 for that particular licenses. We have up-to-date the publish accordingly.
Filed under: Misc
Raspberry Pi lands MPEG-2 and VC-1 decoding through personal licenses, H.264 encoding and CEC tag along initially made an appearance on Engadget on Sun, 26 August 2012 07:20:00 EDT. Please visit our terms to be used of feeds.
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