Nokia details VVC multiview streaming with independent subpictures
Nokia published a blog post outlining how Versatile Video Coding (VVC) can facilitate multiview live streaming. The article details VVC's use in a single-player multiview approach, allowing personalized viewing experiences by clients merging multiple camera feeds. VVC provides advantages over HEVC for this application, such as independent subpictures and simplified bitstream merging.
Key Takeaways
- Nokia describes a single-player multiview model where the player fetches selected camera feeds and combines them into one video bitstream for a single decoder.
- Each camera feed is encoded independently with a dedicated VVC encoder, then merged as independent subpictures into a conforming VVC bitstream.
- The blog says VVC needs only high-level parameter-set changes for merging, while HEVC tile merging can require rewriting coded video data such as slice headers.
- Nokia cites the VVC packaging format in MP4 files and its merge base track feature as a way to implement multiview without parsing or writing VVC syntax.
- The same VVC approach is listed for picture-in-picture replacement, cloud-based multi-point video mixing, viewport-dependent 360-degree streaming, and stereoscopic 3D video.
Why It Matters
For streaming platforms, Nokia is pointing to a practical way to add multiview without breaking existing single-camera delivery. The single-player model keeps views synchronized and still works on devices with only one video decoder, while VVC’s independent subpictures reduce the complexity that HEVC tiles introduce. That matters for broadcast and live-event workflows because the same encoded feeds can serve all users regardless of their view choices. The key signal to watch is whether DVB-style constraints and MP4 merge base track support show up in more deployed multiview implementations.
Read full article at nokia.com