VC-1 follows standards set by the Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) and is formally known as "SMPTE 421M." Microsoft contributed the VC-1 technology in its Windows Media Player 9 video player product for the SMPTE standard, according to a Microsoft technical overview article, which describes the two technologies as being "functionally equivalent." ![]() ![]() ![]() Microsoft is currently investigating the issue, the article states, without indicating when a resolution will be found. VC-1 currently does not use all of the cores in processing video on three-core and six-core computer systems, according to a Microsoft support article. Microsoft last week acknowledged that the VC-1 video codec has limited performance on multicore systems running Windows 7. Software & Systems | News Windows 7 Limited on VC-1 Video Codec Use
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