Jack Moffitt
2000-Jun-20 21:53 UTC
[vorbis-dev] iCAST Announces Beta Release of Vorbis (fwd)
below is the press release that went out today :) it was great to see a lot of you at the summit today... jack. ------------- Beta Version of Vorbis Released, led by iCAST Developers Free, Open Source Alternative to MP3 Codec Gains Early Support from iCAST, Sonique, EMusic, Napster, Etrantrum, Panic and XMMS San Diego, CA - June 20, 2000 - Project Vorbis, spearheaded by developers from iCAST (www.icast.com), an online entertainment and majority-owned operating company of CMGI, today announced the Beta release of Vorbis, a high-quality open source audio compression/decompression format (codec) that is expected to provide a royalty-free alternative to MP3 and other audio compression formats. Several leaders in the digital audio player market have already announced support for Vorbis, including EMusic, Sonique, Napster, Etrantrum, Panic and XMMS. Similar to the popular MP3 codec, Vorbis is designed to allow any person or organization to freely encode audio content and make it available in a downloadable format. Individuals or organizations using Vorbis will be able to develop and market their own Vorbis-based audio players and encoders, without having to pay costly fees for the Vorbis technology. Leading the development of Vorbis are iCAST Vice President of technology Jack Moffitt, iCAST Senior Applications Developer Chris Montgomery and an open source team that includes the creators of the Icecast streaming media server, cdparanoia. "Early listening tests of Vorbis show that it provides excellent sound quality that is comparable, if not superior, to competing formats, and we haven't even reached our first release," said Moffitt. "This is a breakthrough development for companies that are seeking an alternative to the stringent patent protection and royalty fees enforced by the patent holders of the popular MP3 file format." "Napster continues its commitment to support leading music file formats such as Vorbis," said Shawn Fanning, Founder Napster. "Vorbis offers great benefits to musicians who want to share and distribute their music in a cost effective manner." "We congratulate the Vorbis team on their dedication to develop an open source audio format with high quality sound and low cost licensing," said Steve Grady, vice president of marketing for EMusic.com (Nasdaq: EMUS), the Internet's leading seller of downloadable music. "We support all efforts to make downloadable music easier and more accessible to consumers." Vorbis has excellent sound quality and cutting edge features, including fast bitrate scaling, surround channels and sample granularity seek and decode. Software is available to encode and decode on the Windows 95/98/NT, BeOS, Linux, Solaris, and *BSD platforms. Plugins are also available for most popular MP3 players. Vorbis 1.0 is expected to be released in approximately one month. To find more information on Vorbis, including samples and details on how to support it in your content or media player, visit the beta site at: www.vorbis.com --- >8 ---- List archives: http://www.xiph.org/archives/ Ogg project homepage: http://www.xiph.org/ogg/
John Zitterkopf
2000-Jun-21 00:14 UTC
[vorbis-dev] iCAST Announces Beta Release of Vorbis (fwd)
All I can say is WOW! I just got my first taste of Vorbis.... I'm hooked. CDMaster32 will be supporting Vorbis as soon as possible. John ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jack Moffitt" <jack@icecast.org> To: <vorbis@xiph.org> Cc: <vorbis-dev@xiph.org>; <discuss@icecast.org>; <pho@onehouse.com> Sent: Tuesday, June 20, 2000 9:53 PM Subject: [vorbis-dev] iCAST Announces Beta Release of Vorbis (fwd)> > below is the press release that went out today :) > > it was great to see a lot of you at the summit today... > > jack. > > ------------- > > Beta Version of Vorbis Released, led by iCAST Developers > > Free, Open Source Alternative to MP3 Codec Gains Early Support from iCAST, > Sonique, EMusic, Napster, Etrantrum, Panic and XMMS > > San Diego, CA - June 20, 2000 - Project Vorbis, spearheaded by developers > from iCAST (www.icast.com), an online entertainment and majority-owned > operating company of CMGI, today announced the Beta release of Vorbis, a > high-quality open source audio compression/decompression format (codec)that> is expected to provide a royalty-free alternative to MP3 and other audio > compression formats. Several leaders in the digital audio player market > have already announced support for Vorbis, including EMusic, Sonique, > Napster, Etrantrum, Panic and XMMS. > > Similar to the popular MP3 codec, Vorbis is designed to allow any personor> organization to freely encode audio content and make it available in a > downloadable format. Individuals or organizations using Vorbis will beable> to develop and market their own Vorbis-based audio players and encoders, > without having to pay costly fees for the Vorbis technology. > > Leading the development of Vorbis are iCAST Vice President of technology > Jack Moffitt, iCAST Senior Applications Developer Chris Montgomery and an > open source team that includes the creators of the Icecast streaming media > server, cdparanoia. > > "Early listening tests of Vorbis show that it provides excellent sound > quality that is comparable, if not superior, to competing formats, and we > haven't even reached our first release," said Moffitt. "This is a > breakthrough development for companies that are seeking an alternative to > the stringent patent protection and royalty fees enforced by the patent > holders of the popular MP3 file format." > > "Napster continues its commitment to support leading music file formatssuch> as Vorbis," said Shawn Fanning, Founder Napster. "Vorbis offers great > benefits to musicians who want to share and distribute their music in acost> effective manner." > > "We congratulate the Vorbis team on their dedication to develop an open > source audio format with high quality sound and low cost licensing," said > Steve Grady, vice president of marketing for EMusic.com (Nasdaq: EMUS),the> Internet's leading seller of downloadable music. "We support all effortsto> make downloadable music easier and more accessible to consumers." > > Vorbis has excellent sound quality and cutting edge features, includingfast> bitrate scaling, surround channels and sample granularity seek and decode. > Software is available to encode and decode on the Windows 95/98/NT, BeOS, > Linux, Solaris, and *BSD platforms. Plugins are also available for most > popular MP3 players. > > Vorbis 1.0 is expected to be released in approximately one month. To find > more information on Vorbis, including samples and details on how tosupport> it in your content or media player, visit the beta site at: www.vorbis.com > > > > --- >8 ---- > List archives: http://www.xiph.org/archives/ > Ogg project homepage: http://www.xiph.org/ogg/ >--- >8 ---- List archives: http://www.xiph.org/archives/ Ogg project homepage: http://www.xiph.org/ogg/