The MPEG standards consist of different
Parts. Each
Part covers a certain aspect of the whole specification. The standards also specify
profiles and
levels.
Profiles are intended to define a set of tools that are available, and
Levels define the range of appropriate values for the properties associated with them. Some of the approved MPEG standards were revised by later amendments and/or new editions. The primary early MPEG compression formats and related standards include: •
MPEG-1 (1993):
Coding of moving pictures and associated audio for digital storage media at up to about 1.5 Mbit/s (ISO/IEC 11172). This initial version is known as a lossy fileformat and is the first MPEG compression standard for
audio and
video. It is commonly limited to about 1.5 Mbit/s although the specification is capable of much higher bit rates. It was basically designed to allow moving pictures and sound to be encoded into the
bitrate of a
compact disc. It is used on
Video CD and can be used for low-quality video on DVD Video. It was used in digital satellite/cable TV services before MPEG-2 became widespread. To meet the low bit requirement, MPEG-1
downsamples the images, as well as uses picture rates of only 24–30 Hz, resulting in a moderate quality. It is also used on
Blu-ray Discs, but these normally use MPEG-4 Part 10 or SMPTE
VC-1 for high-definition content. •
MPEG-4 (1998):
Coding of audio-visual objects. (ISO/IEC 14496) MPEG-4 provides a framework for more advanced compression algorithms potentially resulting in higher compression ratios compared to MPEG-2 at the cost of higher computational requirements. MPEG-4 also supports Intellectual Property Management and Protection (IPMP), which provides the facility to use proprietary technologies to manage and protect content like
digital rights management. It also supports MPEG-J, a fully programmatic solution for creation of custom interactive multimedia applications (
Java application environment with a
Java API) and many other features. Two new higher-efficiency video coding standards (newer than MPEG-2 Video) are included: •
MPEG-4 Part 2 (including its Simple and Advanced Simple profiles) and •
MPEG-4 AVC (MPEG-4 Part 10 or ITU-T H.264, 2003). MPEG-4 AVC may be used on
HD DVD and
Blu-ray Discs, along with
VC-1 and MPEG-2. MPEG-4 AVC was chosen as the video compression scheme for over-the-air television broadcasting in Brazil (ISDB-TB), based on the digital television system of Japan (ISDB-T). An
MPEG-3 project was cancelled. MPEG-3 was planned to deal with standardizing scalable and multi-resolution compression The cancelled MPEG-3 project is not to be confused with
MP3, which is MPEG-1 or MPEG-2 Audio Layer III. In addition, the following standards, while not sequential advances to the video encoding standard as with MPEG-1 through MPEG-4, are referred to by similar notation: •
MPEG-7 (2002):
Multimedia content description interface. (ISO/IEC 15938) •
MPEG-21 (2001):
Multimedia framework (MPEG-21). (ISO/IEC 21000) MPEG describes this standard as a
multimedia framework and provides for intellectual property management and protection. Moreover, more recently than other standards above, MPEG has produced the following international standards; each of the standards holds multiple MPEG technologies for a variety of applications. (For example, MPEG-A includes a number of technologies on multimedia application format.) •
MPEG-A (2007):
Multimedia application format (MPEG-A). (ISO/IEC 23000) (e.g., an explanation of the purpose for multimedia application formats, MPEG music player application format, MPEG photo player application format and others) •
MPEG-B (2006):
MPEG systems technologies. (ISO/IEC 23001) (e.g.,
Binary MPEG format for XML, Fragment Request Units (FRUs), Bitstream Syntax Description Language (BSDL),
MPEG Common Encryption and others) •
MPEG-C (2006):
MPEG video technologies. (ISO/IEC 23002) (e.g., accuracy requirements for implementation of integer-output 8x8 inverse
discrete cosine transform and others) •
MPEG-D (2007):
MPEG audio technologies. (ISO/IEC 23003) (e.g.,
MPEG Surround, SAOC-Spatial Audio Object Coding and USAC-
Unified Speech and Audio Coding) •
MPEG-E (2007):
Multimedia Middleware. (ISO/IEC 23004) (a.k.a. M3W) (e.g., architecture, multimedia application programming interface (API), component model and others) •
MPEG-G (2019)
Genomic Information Representation (ISO/IEC 23092), Parts 1–6 for transport and storage, coding, metadata and
APIs, reference software,
conformance, and annotations •
Supplemental media technologies (2008, later replaced and withdrawn). (ISO/IEC 29116) It had one published part, media streaming application format protocols, which was later replaced and revised in MPEG-M Part 4's MPEG extensible middleware (MPEG-M) protocols. •
MPEG-V (2011):
Media context and control. (ISO/IEC 23005) (a.k.a. Information exchange with Virtual Worlds) (e.g., Avatar characteristics, Sensor information, Architecture and others) •
MPEG-M (2010):
MPEG eXtensible Middleware (MXM). (ISO/IEC 23006) (e.g., MXM architecture and technologies, API, and MPEG extensible middleware (MXM) protocols) •
MPEG-U (2010):
Rich media user interfaces. (ISO/IEC 23007) (e.g., Widgets) •
MPEG-H (2013):
High Efficiency Coding and Media Delivery in Heterogeneous Environments. (ISO/IEC 23008) Part 1 –
MPEG media transport; Part 2 –
High Efficiency Video Coding (HEVC, ITU-T H.265); Part 3 –
3D Audio. •
MPEG-DASH (2012):
Information technology – Dynamic adaptive streaming over HTTP (DASH). (ISO/IEC 23009) Part 1 – Media presentation description and segment formats •
MPEG-I (2020):
Coded Representation of Immersive Media (ISO/IEC 23090), including Part 2
Omnidirectional Media Format (OMAF) and Part 3 –
Versatile Video Coding (VVC, ITU-T H.266) •
MPEG-CICP (ISO/IEC 23091)
Coding-Independent Code Points (CICP), Parts 1–4 for systems, video, audio, and usage of video code points ==Standardization process==