2,314 research outputs found
No-reference bitstream-based impairment detection for high efficiency video coding
Video distribution over error-prone Internet Protocol (IP) networks results in visual impairments on the received video streams. Objective impairment detection algorithms are crucial for maintaining a high Quality of Experience (QoE) as provided with IPTV distribution. There is a lot of research invested in H.264/AVC impairment detection models and questions rise if these turn obsolete with a transition to the successor of H.264/AVC, called High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC). In this paper, first we show that impairments on HEVC compressed sequences are more visible compaired to H.264/AVC encoded sequences. We also show that an impairment detection model designed for H.264/AVC could be reused on HEVC, but that caution is advised. A more accurate model taking into account content classification needed slight modification to remain applicable for HEVC compression video content
TV-Centric technologies to provide remote areas with two-way satellite broadband access
October 1-2, 2007, Rome, Italy TV-Centric Technologies To Provide Remote Areas With Two-Way Satellite Broadband Acces
A two-way interactive broadband satellite architecture to break the digital divide barrier
September 24-26, 2007, Turin, Ital
Evidence-informed regulatory practice: an adaptive response, 2005â15
Overview: In this occasional paper, the ACMA reflects on its regulatory practice over the past 10 years; specifically, the role of research in evidence-informed decision-making and regulation. It looks at how the ACMA has used research in an environment of ongoing change to document and build evidence, inform public debate about regulation, and build capability among our stakeholders to make communications and media work in Australiaâs national interest
Customer Focus Newsletter, July-August, 2009, Vol. 6, no.4
A bi-monthly bulletin to keep the department/agency management teams of state government better informed. We hope to consolidate most of the service update messages we send throughout the month and keep you updated about the work of the Customer Councils.
If yours is one of the many departments who participated in the second
annual DAS customer satisfaction survey recently, we thank you for taking
the time to give us this important feedback. We look forward to sharing
survey results with you, and pledge to consider responses carefully as we
work to determine benchmarks and set future priorities
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