Windows Media Video Windows Media Video (WMV) is the most recognized
video compression format within the WMV family. Usage of the term
WMV often refers to the Microsoft Windows Media Video format only. Its main competitors are
MPEG-4 AVC,
AVS,
RealVideo, and
MPEG-4 ASP. The first version of the format, WMV 7, was introduced in 1999, and was built upon Microsoft's implementation of
MPEG-4 Part 2. Continued proprietary development led to newer versions of the format, but the
bit stream syntax was not frozen until WMV 9. While all versions of WMV support
variable bit rate,
average bit rate, and
constant bit rate, WMV 9 introduced several important features including native support for
interlaced video, non-square
pixels, and
frame interpolation. WMV 9 also introduced a new profile titled
Windows Media Video 9 Professional, which is activated automatically whenever the video resolution exceeds 300,000 pixels (e.g., 528 px × 576 px, 640 px × 480 px or 768 px × 432 px and beyond) and the bitrate 1 Mbit/s. It is targeted towards high-definition video content, at resolutions such as
720p and
1080p. The
Simple and
Main profile levels in WMV 9 are compliant with the same profile levels in the
VC-1 specification. The
Advanced Profile in VC-1 is implemented in a new WMV format called
Windows Media Video 9 Advanced Profile. It improves compression efficiency for interlaced content and is made transport-independent, making it able to be encapsulated in an
MPEG transport stream or
RTP packet format. The format is not compatible with previous WMV 9 formats, however. WMV is a mandatory video format for
PlaysForSure-certified online stores and devices, as well as
Portable Media Center devices. The
Microsoft Zune,
Xbox 360,
Windows Mobile-powered devices with Windows Media Player, as well as many uncertified devices, support the format.
WMV HD mandates the use of WMV 9 for its certification program, at quality levels specified by Microsoft. WMV used to be the only supported video format for the
Microsoft Silverlight platform, but the H.264 format is now also supported starting with version 3.
Windows Media Video Screen Windows Media Video Screen (WMV Screen) are video formats that specialise in
screencast content. They can capture live screen content, or convert video from third-party screen-capture programs into WMV 9 Screen files. They work best when the source material is mainly static and contains a small color
palette. One of the uses for the format is computer step-by-step demonstration videos. The first version of the format was WMV 7 Screen. The second version, WMV 9 Screen, supports VBR encoding in addition to CBR.
Windows Media Video Image Windows Media Video Image (WMV Image) is a video
slideshow format. The format works by applying timing,
panning and transition effects to a series of images during playback. The codec achieves a higher compression ratio and image quality than WMV 9 for still images as files encoded with WMV Image store static images rather than full-motion video. Since the format relies on the decoder (player) to generate video frames in real-time, playing WMV Image files even at moderate resolutions (e.g. 30
frames per second at 1024 px × 768 px resolution) requires heavy computer processing. The latest version of the format, WMV 9.1 Image, used by
Photo Story 3, features additional transformation effects, but is not compatible with the original WMV 9 Image format. Hardware support for WMV Image is available from Portable Media Centers,
Windows Mobile-powered devices with Windows Media Player 10 Mobile. Since no known domestic DVD player supports this format, users of Photo Story 3 wishing to generate material capable of being played in a DVD player will first have to convert to
MPEG-2 before burning a DVD (average file sizes in MPEG-2 are 5 to 6 times the .wmv file).
Versions ==Audio compression formats==