Internet Low Bitrate Codec

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Internet Low Bit Rate Codec (iLBC)
Filename extension
.lbc[1]
Internet media type
audio/iLBC[1]
Magic number'#!iLBC30\n' or '#!iLBC20\n'[1]
Developed byGlobal IP Solutions, now Google Inc
Initial release2004 (2004)[1]
Type of formatAudio compression format
StandardRFC 3951
iLBC Speech Coder
DevelopersGlobal IP Solutions, now Google Inc
Initial release2004
Repository
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Written inC
Engine
    Lua error in Module:EditAtWikidata at line 29: attempt to index field 'wikibase' (a nil value).
    Operating systemCross-platform
    TypeAudio codec, reference implementation
    License3-clause BSD
    Websitehttps://webrtc.org/license/ilbc-freeware

    Internet Low Bitrate Codec (iLBC) is a royalty-free narrowband speech audio coding format and an open-source reference implementation (codec), developed by Global IP Solutions (GIPS) formerly Global IP Sound (acquired by Google Inc in 2011[2]). It was formerly freeware with limitations on commercial use,[3][4] but since 2011 it is available under a free software/open source (3-clause BSD license) license as a part of the open source WebRTC project.[5] It is suitable for VoIP applications, streaming audio, archival and messaging. The algorithm is a version of block-independent linear predictive coding, with the choice of data frame lengths of 20 and 30 milliseconds. The encoded blocks have to be encapsulated in a suitable protocol for transport, usually the Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP).

    iLBC handles lost frames through graceful speech quality degradation. Lost frames often occur in connection with lost or delayed IP packets. Ordinary low-bitrate codecs exploit dependencies between speech frames, which cause errors to propagate when packets are lost or delayed. In contrast, iLBC-encoded speech frames are independent and so this problem will not occur.

    iLBC is defined in RFC 3951. It is one of the codecs used by Gizmo5, WebRTC, Ekiga, Google Talk, Maemo Recorder (on the Nokia N800/N810), Polycom IP Phone, Cisco, QuteCom, Tuenti,[6] Yahoo! Messenger, Ooma[7] and many others.

    iLBC was submitted to IETF in 2002[8][9] and the final specification was published in 2004.

    Parameters and features

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    See also

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    References

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