Hello, These last 2 months I have been in contact with a very impressive and friendly engineer from Intel who has written an article on my codec and the 4-5 new codecs in general that competes with HEVC.He finally answered me that as Intel is a founding member of the Alliance for Open Media and chairs several MPEG WG around HEVC, they won't be able to put extra resources on the NHW Project.So far nothing surprising, Xiph.org was also not interested in the NHW Project, but the good news is that I told the Intel engineer that I would like to complete the NHW Project and as Intel is highly involved in the open-source movement, they will maybe try to tell me what points need to be improved in my codec, what points are not good and need to be fixed, which processings I could try in the codec... That would be so great and so kind from Intel! I will maybe have some help on how to code good lower quality settings (high compression) because it is certainly the main task that remains.For now, I don't have freelance contract to work on the NHW Project so I am not able to really work on it currently, I think paying an engineer for that purpose is too expensvie, so I will try to make a (complete) TODO list to finish the project and give it to the open-source commuity. First thoughts, there are, coding lower quality settings, better YUV420 2x2 up- and down- samplings, a dozen of (fast) algorithm refinements/tunings, process on rows and columns for the DWT and suppress image transposition, some advanced improvements to the compression schemes, and when all that is done, adapt the codec to any size of image, and then I think the NHW codec will be completed and ready. If some few people are interested to give a little of their time, and work on the project, really do not hesitate to let me know, it would be so great!!! You are also welcome to propagate the call on other forums, networks... -It makes me think I have created a Twitter page: https://twitter.com/NHW_Project -.And yes!, working on the NHW Project is competitive and challenging, the NHW codec is a new advanced royalty-free approach with very good results, and who knows, maybe the industry will realize that AOM AV1 or HEVC are too slow to encode to use it in portable phones, cameras, tablets and other portables devices and they will maybe reconsider faster codecs... and the NHW codec is ultra fast, certainly the fastest! Again if you want to join and work on the open-source NHW Project, you are more than welcome, it would be much appreciated! For now there is one researcher from India that gives some of his time and studies directional wavelet transforms in the NHW codec. Many thanks! Cheers, Raphael -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.xiph.org/pipermail/theora/attachments/20170512/5f20896d/attachment.html>