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Elementary stream

An elementary stream (ES) as defined by the MPEG communication protocol is usually the output of an audio or video encoder. ES contains only one kind of data (e.g. audio, video, or closed caption). An elementary stream is often referred to as 'elementary', 'data', 'audio', or 'video' bitstreams or streams. The format of the elementary stream depends upon the codec or data carried in the stream, but will often carry a common header when packetized into a packetized elementary stream. An elementary stream (ES) as defined by the MPEG communication protocol is usually the output of an audio or video encoder. ES contains only one kind of data (e.g. audio, video, or closed caption). An elementary stream is often referred to as 'elementary', 'data', 'audio', or 'video' bitstreams or streams. The format of the elementary stream depends upon the codec or data carried in the stream, but will often carry a common header when packetized into a packetized elementary stream. The digitized sound signal is divided up into blocks of 384 samples in Layer I and 1152 samples in Layers II and III. The sound sample block is encoded within an audio frame: The header of a frame contains general information such as the MPEG Layer, the sampling frequency, the number of channels, whether the frame is CRC protected, whether the sound is the original:

[ "Multiplexing", "STREAMS", "Network packet" ]
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