Abstract
As the Internet and wireless networks are developed rapidly, the demand of communicating anywhere, anytime on any device emerges. However, most of the current wireless networks still work in low bandwidths, and mobile devices still suffer from weak computational power, short battery lifetime and limited display capability. We developed portrait video phone systems that can run on PCs and Pocket PCs at very low bit rates through the Internet. The core technology that portrait video phones employ is the so-called portrait video (or bi-level video) codec. Portrait video codec first converts a full-color video into a black/white image sequence and then compresses it into a black/white portrait-like video. Portrait video possesses clearer shape, smoother motion, shorter initial latency, and cheaper computational cost than MPEG2, MPEG4 and H.263 for low bandwidths. Typically the portrait video phone provides QCIF-size video with a frame rate of 5-15 fps for a 9.6 Kbps video bandwidth. The portrait video is so small that it can even be transmitted through an HTTP proxy as text. Experiments show that the portrait video phones work well on ordinary GSM wireless telecommunication networks.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Pages | 597-598 |
| Number of pages | 2 |
| Publication status | Published - 2001 |
| Externally published | Yes |
| Event | -ACM Multimedia 2001 Workshops- 2001 Multimedia Conference - Ottawa, Ont., Canada Duration: 30 Sept 2001 → 5 Oct 2001 |
Conference
| Conference | -ACM Multimedia 2001 Workshops- 2001 Multimedia Conference |
|---|---|
| Country/Territory | Canada |
| City | Ottawa, Ont. |
| Period | 30/09/01 → 5/10/01 |
Keywords
- Bi-level video
- JBIG
- MPEG
- Portrait video
- Video broadcast and communication
- Video coding