AMV video format
AMV is a proprietary video file format, produced for MP4 players, as well as S1 MP3 players with video playback. There are now two different MTV formats: the older one for the Actions chip, and a newer one for ALi’s M5661 chip. This format for ALi one was ALIAVI.
Filename extension |
.amv, .mtv |
---|---|
Container for | Audio, video |
Extended from | AVI and Motion JPEG |
Standard | proprietary |
Format
The container is a modified version of AVI.[1] The video format is a variant of Motion JPEG, with fixed rather than variable quantisation tables.[2] The audio format is a variant of IMA ADPCM, where the first 8 bytes of each frame are origin (16 bits), index (16 bits) and number of encoded 16-bit samples (32 bits); all known AMV files run sound at 22050 samples/second.[1]
Low decoder overhead is paramount as the S1 MP3 players have very low-end processors (a Z80 variant). Video compression ratio is low – around 4 pixels/byte, compared with over 10 pixels/byte for MPEG-2[1] – though as the files are of low resolution (96×96 up to 208×176) and frame rate (10, 12, or 16 frame/s), file sizes are small in bytes per second. With a resolution of 128×96 pixels and a framerate of 12 frame/s, a 30-minute video will be compressed into 80 MB.
Documentation
Documentation for this format is not publicly available, but Dobrica Pavlinušić reverse engineered the format[1] to produce a Perl-based decoder[3] and Pavlinušić, Tom Van Braeckel and Vladimir Voroshilov produced a version of FFmpeg that works on AMV files.[4] The mainline version of FFmpeg now decodes and encodes AMV.
References
- 1 2 3 4 voroshil (2007-10-15). "AmvDocumentation". Google Code. Archived from the original on 23 March 2008. Retrieved 2008-04-06.
- ↑ forcing mjpegenc to use fixed quantisation tables (Tom Van Braeckel, FFmpeg-devel mailing list, 28 October 2007)
- ↑ AMV free decoder (Dobrica Pavlinušić, personal blog, 19 August 2007)
- ↑ amv-codec-tools (Google Code)
External links
- All about AMV file format (MultimediaWiki)