SILK in the context of "Opus (audio format)"

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👉 SILK in the context of Opus (audio format)

Opus is a free and open source lossy audio coding format developed by the Xiph.Org Foundation and standardized by the Internet Engineering Task Force, designed for efficient low-latency encoding of both speech and general audio. Due to its lower latency relative to other standard codecs, Opus finds specific use cases in real-time interactive communication for low-end embedded processors. Opus replaces both Vorbis and Speex for new applications.

Opus combines the speech-oriented LPC-based SILK algorithm and the lower-latency MDCT-based CELT algorithm, switching between or combining them as needed. Bitrate, audio bandwidth, complexity, and algorithm choice can be adjusted for each individual frame. Opus has low algorithmic delay (26.5 ms by default) ideal for use as part of a real-time communication link, networked music performances, and live lip sync; by trading off quality or bitrate, the delay can be further reduced down to 5 ms. Its delay thus is significantly lower compared to competing codecs, which require well over 100 ms. Opus remains competitive with these formats in terms of quality per bitrate.

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