AV1 looks very cool but it doesn't have nearly the level of compatibility that H264 has. H264 works out of the box on browsers, as well as having hardware support on phones and SBCs and set-top-boxes and whatnot.
AV1 might eventually get there, and that would be awesome if it does, but H264 has been around long enough to have a substantial "first mover advantage" over AV1.
Last Raspberry doesnt have H264 decode hardware, wouldnt be surprised if that becomes a trend. A lot of SBCs only support up to 1080 on h264, 4k requires h265.
Yeah, I read that, though I think the latest Raspberry Pi might be fast enough to decode h264 in software so it might be a non-issue anyway; as long as it is fast enough I think I actually prefer software decoding just because (I think) it's more platform-independent.
I think I get your point though; if the Raspberry Pi is not adding chips for native H264 decoding, set top boxes and other SBCs might drop it as well.
Yeah, no question; H264 had a 10+ year head start and entrenched itself as part of the Blu-ray and online video sharing space. Once AV1 has similarly-largely-scoped things then it'll probably take a lot of h264's market, and it'll be royalty-free from the get-go.
I definitely want AV1 to become the "video standard to rule them all", but once H264's patents expire I think I'm also ok with it being the standard as well.
AV1 might eventually get there, and that would be awesome if it does, but H264 has been around long enough to have a substantial "first mover advantage" over AV1.