Coding Technologies: Difference between revisions

From Hydrogenaudio Knowledgebase
mNo edit summary
m (Minor page re-formatting.)
 
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Coding Technologies AB''' was a Swedish technology company that pioneered the use of [[Spectral Band Replication]] in [[Advanced Audio Coding]]. Its MPEG 2 AAC-derived codec was called [[aacPlus]], and was submitted to MPEG for standardization. The codec would become the MPEG-4 HE-AAC profile. XM Radio used aacPlus for their streams. aacPlus with [[Parametric stereo]], called Extended aacPlus, would become MPEG-4 HE-AACv2. Coding Technologies was acquired by Dolby Laboratories in 2007 for $250 million in cash. [http://investor.dolby.com/releasedetail.cfm?releaseid=274917]
'''Coding Technologies AB''' was a Swedish technology company that pioneered the use of [[Spectral Band Replication]] in [[Advanced Audio Coding]]. Its [[MPEG-2]] AAC-derived [[codec]] was called [[aacPlus]], and was submitted to MPEG for standardization. The codec would become the [[MPEG-4]] HE-AAC profile. XM Radio used aacPlus for their streams. aacPlus with [[Parametric stereo]], called Extended aacPlus, would become MPEG-4 HE-AACv2.
 
Coding Technologies was acquired by Dolby Laboratories in 2007 for $250 million in cash.<ref>[http://investor.dolby.com/releasedetail.cfm?releaseid=274917 Dolby Laboratories to Acquire Coding Technologies]</ref>
 
==References==
<references/>
 
==External links==
* {{wikipedia}}


[[Category:Companies and Organizations]]
[[Category:Companies and Organizations]]

Latest revision as of 19:23, 29 November 2019

Coding Technologies AB was a Swedish technology company that pioneered the use of Spectral Band Replication in Advanced Audio Coding. Its MPEG-2 AAC-derived codec was called aacPlus, and was submitted to MPEG for standardization. The codec would become the MPEG-4 HE-AAC profile. XM Radio used aacPlus for their streams. aacPlus with Parametric stereo, called Extended aacPlus, would become MPEG-4 HE-AACv2.

Coding Technologies was acquired by Dolby Laboratories in 2007 for $250 million in cash.[1]

References

External links