This article is taken from 
http://www.wirevolution.com/2009/01/13/skypes-new-super-wideband-codec.  -Steve.

January 13, 2009
Skype's new super-wideband codec

I spoke with Jonathan Christensen of Skype yesterday, about the new codec in the
latest Windows beta of Skype:

MS: Skype announced a new voice codec at CES. What's different about it from the
old one?

JC: The new codec is code-named SILK. Compared to its predecessor, SVOPC, the 
new
codec gives the same or better audio response at half the bit-rate for wideband,
and we also introduced a super wideband mode. SVOPC is a 16kHz sample rate, 8kHz
audio bandwidth. The new codec has that mode as well, but it also has a 24 kHz 
sample
rate, 12 kHz audio bandwidth mode. Most USB headsets have enough capture and 
render
fidelity that you can experience the 12 kHz super wideband audio.

MS: Is the new codec an evolution of SVOPC?

JC: The new codec was a separate development branch from SVOPC. It has been 
under
development for over 3 years, during which we focused both on the codec and the 
echo
canceller and all the surrounding bits, and eventually got all that put 
together.

MS: What about the computational complexity?

JC: The new codec design point was different from SVOPC. SVOPC was designed for 
use
on the desktop with a math coprocessor. It is actually pretty efficient. It's 
just
that it has a number of floats in it so it becomes extremely inefficient when 
it's
not on a PC.

The new codec's design goal was to be ultra lightweight and embeddable. The vast
majority of the addressable device market is better suited to fixed point, so 
it's
written in fixed point ANSI C - it's as lightweight as a codec can be in terms 
of
CPU utilization. Our design point was to be able to put it into mobile devices 
where
battery life and CPU power are constrained, and it took almost 3 years to put it
together. It's a fundamental, ground up development; lots of very interesting 
science
going into it, and a really talented developer leading the project. And now it's
ready. It's a pretty significant jump forward.

MS: Is the new codec based on predictive voice coding?
JC: SVOPC has two modes, an audio mode and a speech mode, and the speech mode is
much more structured towards speech. The new codec strikes little bit more of a 
balance
between a general audio coder and a speech coder. So it does a pretty good job 
with
stuff like background noise and music. But to get that kind of bit-rate 
reduction
there are things about speech that you can capitalize on and get huge 
efficiency;
we didn't toss all that out. We are definitely using some of the model approach.

MS: Normally one expects with an evolution for the increments to get smaller 
over
time. With the new codec you are getting a 50% improvement in bandwidth 
utilization,
so you can't be at the incremental stage yet?

JC: I don't think we are. We were listening to samples from various versions of 
the
client going back to 2.6, now we are at 4.0. In the same situation - pushing the
same files in the same acoustic settings through the different client versions -
in every release there's a noticeable (even to the naked ear) difference in 
quality
between the releases.

We are not completely done with it. There are many different areas where we can 
continue
to optimize and tweak it, but we believe it's at or above the current state of 
the
industry in terms of performance.

Beta 4 of Skype for Windows has the new codec.  The current Mac beta
 doesn't yet support the new codec.

Regards Steve
Email:  s...@internode.on.net
Windows Live Messenger:  internetuser...@hotmail.com
Skype:  steve1963

Jonathan Mosen List Founder
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