Coding Technologies

Swedish technology company From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Coding Technologies AB was a Swedish technology company that pioneered the use of spectral band replication in Advanced Audio Coding. It is a major provider of audio compression technologies for digital broadcasting.[3]

Company typeAktiebolag (Swedish corporation)
IndustryAudio coding
Founded1997 (1997) in Stockholm, Sweden
Quick facts Company type, Industry ...
Coding Technologies
Company typeAktiebolag (Swedish corporation)
IndustryAudio coding
Founded1997 (1997) in Stockholm, Sweden
FounderLars Liljeryd[1]
DefunctNovember 8, 2007 (2007-11-08)
FateAcquired by Dolby Laboratories
Key people
Lars Liljeryd, Kristofer Kjörling, Martin Dietz [1][2]
Productsmp3PRO, aacPlus
SubsidiariesCoding Technologies GmbH (Germany)
Close

Background

The company was founded in Stockholm, Sweden, in 1997 by Lars Liljeryd.[4] A German subsidiary was formed in 2000 as Coding Technologies GmbH (later renamed Dolby Germany GmbH) with support from the research organization Fraunhofer IIS.[1] The company also had offices in the United States and China.

Coding Technologies was acquired by Dolby Laboratories in 2007 for $250 million in cash.[5] Since then it was renamed to Dolby International AB.

Technologies

Coding Technologies’ MPEG-2 AAC-derived codec, called aacPlus, was published in 2001 and submitted to the MPEG for standardization. The codec would become the MPEG-4 High-Efficiency AAC (HE-AAC) profile in 2003. XM Satellite Radio used aacPlus for its streams.[6] aacPlus with Parametric stereo, called enhanced aacPlus, would become MPEG-4 HE-AACv2. The technology was adopted by Qualcomm in 2004, allowing it to be integrated into wireless handsets.[7]

Lars Liljeryd, Kristofer Kjörling, and Martin Dietz received the IEEE Masaru Ibuka Consumer Electronics Award in 2013 for their work at Coding Technologies, developing and marketing SBR-based audio coding.[2][8]

References

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI