View Full Version : HevcVisa Cloud: Free HEVC/H.265 analyzer
h264visa
9th July 2012, 14:39
HevcVisa Cloud(hevcvisa.codecian.com) (http://hevcvisa.codecian.com) is the first cloud based HEVC(H.265) video analyzer. HevcVisa Cloud can be freely used by anybody, at anywhere and anytime, the only requirements are internet connection and browser(with JavaScript enabled).
Here are main features:
+Easy navigation through frame thumbnails.
+Detailed analysis of Coding Unit, including location in file, total bits and bits for PU and TU, etc.
+Detailed analysis of Coding Unit prediction.
+In-depth picture statistics, including bits distribution, CU type distribution, average CU size etc.
+Overlay display for Coding Unit structure, type, temperature(bits), motion vectors, as well as slice boundary.
+Stream and slice headers.
+Decoded Pixels in each stage: Coefficients, Residual, Predicted, Reconstructed, and Final values.
h264visa
17th July 2012, 01:44
We had a minor update last weekend. Here is a screen shot for the new version:
http://www.codecian.com/pics/hevcvisa_cloud.jpg
GOOGLE Chrome, Firefox, and Safari are recommended for better experience while using HevcVisa Cloud.
fb39ca4
29th March 2015, 03:25
The link no longer works. Is this no longer offered, or has it moved to a new URL?
LoRd_MuldeR
29th March 2015, 14:09
I see no mention of it on the main web-site:
http://www.codecian.com/
Daemon404
31st March 2015, 20:34
I see they are still illegally static linking to FFmpeg.
fb39ca4
1st April 2015, 00:33
I see they are still illegally static linking to FFmpeg.
How can you tell?
Daemon404
10th April 2015, 22:29
How can you tell?
If you look at the binary in a hex or text editor, you see all of the FFmpeg symbols, strings, and even the GPL license string. You can also match the function disassembly.
fb39ca4
15th April 2015, 19:26
Have you brought it to the attention of the ffmpeg developers? Worst case, nothing will happen, but in the best case the company would be forced to release the source to this program if they wanted to keep using ffmpeg.
LoRd_MuldeR
15th April 2015, 19:47
Have you brought it to the attention of the ffmpeg developers? Worst case, nothing will happen, but in the best case the company would be forced to release the source to this program if they wanted to keep using ffmpeg.
Apart from "several optional parts and optimizations", FFmpeg is released under the LGPL. Only those optional parts, if enabled, make it GPL.
So you can link against FFmpeg from a proprietary application just fine, as long as you don't need/use the optional parts. Still, the FFmpeg code would need to be shipped as a separate DLL in order to fully satisfy the LGPL.
And if they did some modifications to FFmpeg itself, they would have to release at least the source code of those modifications, of course.
hi3516a
14th May 2015, 16:30
Great. I am just need it. I had download another analyzer before, but it is free for 15 days.
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