MPEG-A is a group of standards for composing MPEG systems formally known as ISO/IEC 23000 - Multimedia Application Format, published since 2007.[1][2][3]
MPEG-A consists of 20 parts, including:
- MPEG-A Part 1: Purpose for multimedia application formats
- MPEG-A Part 2: MPEG music player application format
- MPEG-A Part 3: MPEG photo player application format
- MPEG-A Part 4: Musical slide show application format
- MPEG-A Part 5: Media streaming application format
- MPEG-A Part 6: Professional archival application format
- MPEG-A Part 7: Open access application format
- MPEG-A Part 8: Portable video application format
- MPEG-A Part 9: Digital Multimedia Broadcasting application format
- MPEG-A Part 10: Surveillance application format
- MPEG-A Part 11: Stereoscopic video application format
- MPEG-A Part 12: Interactive music application format
- MPEG-A Part 13: Augmented reality application format
- MPEG-A Part 15: Multimedia preservation application format
- MPEG-A Part 16: Publish/Subscribe Application Format
- MPEG-A Part 17: Multiple sensorial media application format
- MPEG-A Part 18: Media linking application format
- MPEG-A Part 19: Common media application format (CMAF) for segmented media (MPEG CMAF),[4] – a media application format for ABR (adaptive bitrate) media
See also
References
|
---|
|
MPEG-1 Parts |
- Part 1: Systems
- Part 2: Video
- Part 3: Audio
|
---|
MPEG-2 Parts | |
---|
MPEG-4 Parts | |
---|
MPEG-7 Parts | |
---|
MPEG-21 Parts | |
---|
MPEG-D Parts | |
---|
MPEG-G Parts | |
---|
MPEG-H Parts | |
---|
Other | |
---|
ISO standards by standard number |
---|
|
1–9999 | |
---|
10000–19999 | |
---|
20000+ | |
---|
|
|
---|
IEC standards | |
---|
ISO/IEC standards | |
---|
Related | |
---|
| Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MPEG-A. Read more |