Good. All it needs now is some very important web sites to use it, to force its
implementation to happen "everywhere". I don't hold out much hope of quite
everywhere however, as I understand that a rather slow and non-innovative
company in Cupertino, whose main business is fast becoming litigation, and whose
products are made by almot slave labour, has not yet been able to support Flash
based media on their products, so I don't see them having the capability or
intent to include Opus codecs any time soon. Not so sure about an equaly
non-innovative and now declining company in Redmond either, because I am not
sure that their current management is going to last much longer, following the
imminent failure in the marketplace of their forthcoming products, and after the
management upheaval they will be too busy trying to postpone the terminal
decline phase to adapt to new technology. They may have to recall Mr. Flop to
help them in their decline towards Chapter 7, as he has proved his capabilities
with Nokia. Still, Opus will be on Linux and xBSD and Android, which between
them can cover most important areas. [ Reply to This | Parent | # ]
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