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Ogg

Ogg is a free, open container format for multimedia data maintained by the Xiph.Org Foundation. It is designed to efficiently store and stream multiple independent streams—such as audio, video, and text—within a single file, using a modular, open specification that is not tied to any particular codec.

The Ogg container does not define audio or video encoding; instead, it wraps streams encoded with various

History and licensing: Ogg originated from the development work of the Xiph.Org Foundation in the late 1990s

Adoption and compatibility: Ogg is widely supported by free and open-source tools such as VLC, FFmpeg, and

codecs
such
as
Vorbis
(audio),
Opus
(audio),
Speex
(audio),
Theora
(video),
or
other
formats
that
support
the
Ogg
container.
Each
stream
is
independently
encoded
and
multiplexed
into
a
continuous
bitstream,
organized
into
pages
that
facilitate
streaming
and
random
access.
Metadata
can
be
stored
using
Vorbis
comments
and
additional
headers,
and
chapters
or
coordinates
can
be
included.
as
a
patent-unencumbered
container
for
multimedia.
It
and
its
codecs
are
released
under
permissive
licenses;
the
project
emphasizes
free
use
and
broad
compatibility.
MPlayer,
as
well
as
many
hardware
players
and
operating
systems.
Common
file
extensions
include
.ogg
for
generic
audio/video,
.ogv
for
video-only
content,
and
.opus
for
Opus
within
Ogg;
other
extensions
exist
for
specific
codecs.