| Inside Google's master plan for faster, sharper streaming video Google is working on a new technology called VP10 that will allow it to squeeze higher-quality video over broadband and mobile networks. And thanks to patent issues with a rival standard, it has a chance to catch on. MOUNTAIN VIEW, California -- We've all been there: After clicking or tapping a YouTube link, we're greeted with a long wait, then video marred by blurry details and distracting blocky patterns. Google has been trying to improve the situation with technology called VP9 that compresses the video data so they can move across networks faster. And with a successor called VP10 due in a couple of years, it's promising an even bigger boost to image quality -- not just sharper images, but also richer color and a better ability to span from bright highlights to dark shadows. Google's free-to-use VP technology is the proverbial underdog to the established standard for data compression, known as H.264. But it is getting new attention because of new patent fee problems afflicting its major rival for next-gen video, a technology called HEVC or H.265. What's shaping up is a potential battle for how video gets compressed and distributed. Compression standards and video patents are arcane matters, but they matter to anyone who watches video -- which is to say just about everybody. Video compression is crucial to the shift from DVDs and Blu-ray discs to online video; to the arrival of video services like HBO Now that let people cancel expensive cable TV subscriptions; and to the livelihoods of Michelle Phan and other YouTube starsthat younger viewers watch on smartphones and Web browsers. Figuring out the right standard that everyone can agree on is a critical step in ensuring that "House of Cards" streams to your television crisply and clearly. Compared to H.264, VP9 roughly halves the network capacity needed to send video of a certain quality. And in an interview here at Google headquarters, engineering product manager James Bankoski revealed that Google expects a similar improvement with the forthcoming VP10. "We are trying to cut it in half again," Bankoski said. 
James Bankoski, Google's engineering product manager for Chrome MediaStephen Shankland/CNETVP9 and VP10 are no shoo-ins. HEVC still has major momentum, especially when it comes to broad support extending to cameras, smartphone processors, Blu-ray discs and other domains beyond streaming video. And significant players including network giant Cisco Systems and Firefox maker Mozilla chose to launch their own HEVC/H.265 alternatives rather than rely on Google. But Google is trying to move fast with its compression technology. Already this month, Google engineers began adding the first VP10 changes to the VPx software project. "We're hoping to hit the performance target by the end of next year," Bankoski said. It'll take some time after that for Google's hardware and software partners to bring their VP10 support to market after that. New video features, new data demandsNew compression is key to both traditional TV and new-era online video. At the top of the list is the industry's effort to introduce high "4K" resolution, which in principle offers more detailed imagery by at least quadrupling the number of pixels from today's 1,920x1,080 to 3,840x2,160. With doubled efficiency, VP9 and HEVC/H.265 mean 4K video requires the network capacity to increase by a factor of two rather than four. Beyond that are other features, each with a new appetite for data. One is a wider gamut of colors for richer, more realistic scenery. Another is high dynamic range (HDR), which means bright clouds and sunlit faces don't wash out into blazing white patches and black-suited Batman can still be seen amid the shadows. Better compression also can deliver more video frames per second, which is helpful when showing fast-twitch video games. If 3D video ever catches on, it, too, places new demands on networks. Google has more power than most over video technology because it controls both YouTube, which sends gargantuan quantities of video, and Chrome and Android, which consume it. That means it can introduce and improve technology without having to wait for lots of other industry players to cooperate. Developing the technology is only the first step in making a compression "codec" -- which is essentially the translator for coded video signals. To be effective, a codec must be built deep into software and Web browsers and baked into processors so watching video doesn't sap precious smartphone battery power or overheat TVs and set-top boxes. There's a tradeoff: Saving network capacity requires compression schemes that use more processing power. PCs are powerful enough to decode video using general-purpose processors like Intel's Core family, but for mobile phones showing high-definition video, the compression technology needs to be built directly into the processor. Moving to VP10 will increase the processing demands even further, but Google believes it shouldn't be more than 40 percent more work to decode VP10 video than VP9. The hardware support is coming, most notably in the Samsung Exynos 7420 processor used in the Galaxy S6 family of smartphones. Other chips with VP9 support are coming from MediaTek,STMicroelectronics, Sigma Designs, Nvidia and Broadcom. "Almost all the 4K TVs that came to market this year already have VP9 hardware decoding support for 4K," said Jani Huoponen, the Google product manager in charge of VP9 hardware support. YouTube compatibility is a big incentive: The site began streaming VP9 video in late 2013. But VP9 and its VP8 predecessor still aren't built into Microsoft's Windows for PCs or into Apple's chips in iPads and iPhones, meaning that online video companies can't count on it the way they can rely on rival standard H.264. |