Pegasys Inc. announced today that it has formally signed an agreement with x264 LLC for the use of the x264 H.264/AVC encoder under a commercial license. The x264 encoder will be integrated into the next generation of Pegasys’ popular video conversion software, TMPGEnc 4.0 XPress, and will be the first commercial software granted a commercial license for this technology in Japan.
x264 is used by well-known websites such as YouTube and Facebook, and is widely regarded as the world's best H.264 encoder. With ten years of experience in video software and user interface design, Pegasys will seamlessly integrate the x264 encoder into TMPGEnc and bring x264's state-of-the-art encoding technology to their video creation software.
Pegasys is world renowned for its video conversion software, used to compress and convert video files to numerous formats with an easy-to-use interface that attracts users the world over. Customers demand a high-quality video format that is easy to process. The x264 encoder, with its combination of encoding quality and flexible options, falls in line with Pegasys’ goals and the customer’s needs making this agreement a perfect match.
"For the past decade, we have been developing video software with our in-house developers," stated Tak EBINE, CEO of Pegasys. "However, in today’s market, more and more technology is being shared and licensed. YouTube, Ustream, and other video sharing and distribution sites are diversifying the video on demand market. This has led us to adopt a new policy to rely not only on our in-house technology but also on the best technology from other developers, such as the x264 team, to meet the high demands of our customers and improve the quality of Pegasys software."
"For the past seven years, x264 has advanced from a small project to the world's most powerful H.264 encoding software," said Jason Garrett-Glaser, x264 developer. But being the best is only half the battle: the other task is making it available for everyone. With our new commercial licensing program, Pegasys is now able to use x264 in TMPEGEnc, making it easier than ever for more people to create high quality video."