Divx / Xvid: Face Off
DivX is a very well known video codec
that is used in most video and audio recording nowadays. It has become
popular, especially in ripping audio and video disc, due to its lossy
mpeg-4 compression that allows it to save movies and songs in very small
file sizes with very little noticeable loss of quality. It has been
created by a company called DivX Inc. and although there have been quite
a number of debacles regarding adware and the like, they have been
going strong and now have the DivX software available in two versions.
One of which is the basic version that is free and the professional
version that is for sale. Both versions can play and encode files in
divx, and understandably so, the professional version offers a few more
options and perks when encoding files.
Xvid on the other hand is a free
software published in the GNU General Public License that is also based
on the mpeg-4 format. The name Xvid, as you probably know, is just DivX
written backwards. This was meant to poke fun at DivX which is the
primary competitor of Xvid. Origin wise, Xvid was an offshoot of DivX’s
attempt to provide an open source version of its software called
OpenDivX. But the program was cut back when the general public began to
make improvements that for outperformed the original. Using the last
pieces of code that were present when OpenDivX was stopped, Xvid was
born.
When we delve into the performance of
the two software, we would likely see that Xvid is always on the cutting
edge of development, producing greater performance and a lot more
options compared to DivX. But this sort of development makes Xvid a
little bit more difficult to master for the general public. Though DivX
lags behind compared to Xvid, they have the general advantage of being a
lot more stable and they are also accepted as the standard especially
in hardware that’s capable of playing this format. When encoding video
with Xvid, you can still create material that can be played in most
set-top DivX players. But the use of the more advanced features of Xvid
could create artifacts in the video output and sometimes
incompatibilities, making the playback of Xvid videos in DivX players
unacceptable.
If you want to have a standardized video
format that you can play in most hardware players, then DivX is for
you. But when you want to have more advanced options and you only need
playback on a PC, then Xvid is the software to try.
Read more: Difference Between DivX and Xvid | Difference Between | DivX vs Xvid http://www.differencebetween.net/technology/difference-between-divx-and-xvid/#ixzz1L8nrGvI9
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