In my opinion MPEG 4 should not be placed in a MPEG 2 container.
Mainconcepts was the first to allow h.264 in a PS or TS container. This allowed editors and broadcasters to use the new formats without the need for new programs. However it has also created incompatibilities and support problems.
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All Digital Terrestrial Television based on DVB-T are going to move to H264 video embedded in 'regular' MPEG2 TS.
"All" is not correct! There are lots of holdouts that will continue broadcasting MPEG 2. In general even the holdouts would like to see this happen.
But tell me something I don't already know. I have known this for more than 2 years. If everyone was jumping off a bridge would you follow them just because everyone was doing it?
At any rate all I was saying is there are problems with h.264 in a MPEG TS container (incompatibilities) and a lack of support (most programs and decoders including hardware) at the moment. I guess that's why all the satellites are still in test and to some degree everyone is experiencing some sort of issues. It is generally believed this is the future and MPEG 2 is dead, but until there is full compatibility among vendors we will continue to wait and see what the future will bring.
Wal-Mart has just endorsed the MPEG HD DVD standard. Personally I think this is nuts that the worlds largest retailer is taking a stand for a format. Even though in the short term they may be right.
Never in history have I seen so much hype in so many areas of technology that are NOT finished yet or so many demonstrations of this technology that appears to be fantastic that still isn't ready for prime time. I can line up 10 or more wide screen TVs from differing vendors for example and more than half do not portray a 16x9 picture properly. To me this is the Moon Pie where all of the pieces are not ready to make the whole, but it seems that everyone on the block wants to be the first to experience it and the opinions offered are in most cases just conjecture.