Dolby Digital

Dolby Digital, originally synonymous with Dolby AC-3, is the name for a family of audio compression technologies developed by Dolby Laboratories. Called Dolby Stereo Digital until 1995, it is lossy compression (except for Dolby TrueHD). The first use of Dolby Digital was to provide digital sound in cinemas from 35 mm film prints. It has since also been used for TV broadcast, radio broadcast via satellite, digital video streaming, DVDs, Blu-ray discs and game consoles.

Dolby Digital
AbbreviationDD
Formation1986
TypeAudio compression format, lossy compression
Location
  • United States
Area served
Worldwide
Websiteprofessional.dolby.com/tv/dolby-digital/

The basis of the Dolby AC-3 multi-channel audio coding standard is the modified discrete cosine transform (MDCT), a lossy audio compression algorithm.[1] It is a modification of the discrete cosine transform (DCT) algorithm, which was proposed by Nasir Ahmed in 1972 for image compression.[2] The DCT was adapted into the MDCT by J.P. Princen, A.W. Johnson and Alan B. Bradley at the University of Surrey in 1987.[3]

Dolby Laboratories adapted the MDCT algorithm along with perceptual coding principles to develop the AC-3 audio format for cinema. The AC-3 format was released as the Dolby Digital standard in February 1991.[4][5] Dolby Digital was the earliest MDCT-based audio compression standard released, and was followed by others for home and portable usage, such as Sony's ATRAC (1992), the MP3 standard (1993) and AAC (1997).[6]

Cinema

Batman Returns was the first film to be announced as using Dolby SR-D (Spectral Recording-Digital) technology when it premiered in theaters in the summer of 1992.[7] Dolby Digital cinema soundtracks are optically recorded on a 35 mm release print using sequential data blocks placed between every perforation hole on the soundtrack side of the film. A constant bit rate of 320 kbit/s is used. A charge-coupled device (CCD) scanner in the image projector picks up a scanned video image of this area, and a processor correlates the image area and extracts the digital data as an AC-3 bitstream. The data is then decoded into a 5.1 channel audio source. All film prints with Dolby Digital data also have Dolby Stereo analogue soundtracks using Dolby SR noise reduction and such prints are known as Dolby SR-D prints. The analogue soundtrack provides a fall-back option in case of damage to the data area or failure of the digital decoding; it also provides compatibility with projectors not equipped with digital soundheads. Almost all modern cinema prints are of this type and may also include SDDS data and a timecode track to synchronize CD-ROMs carrying DTS soundtracks.

A Dolby Digital Penthouse Soundhead mounted on a mid-1950s vintage Kalee model 20 projector
A photo of a 35 mm film print featuring all four audio formats (or quad track)- from left to right: Sony Dynamic Digital Sound (SDDS) (blue area to the left of the sprocket holes), Dolby Digital (grey area between the sprocket holes labelled with the Dolby Double-D logo in the middle), analog optical sound (the two white lines to the right of the sprocket holes), and the DTS time code (the dashed line to the far right)

The simplest way of converting existing projectors is to add a so-called penthouse digital soundhead above the projector head. However, for new projectors it made sense to use dual analogue/digital soundheads in the normal optical soundhead position under the projector head. To allow for the dual-soundhead arrangement the data is recorded 26 frames ahead of the picture. If a penthouse soundhead is used, the data must be delayed in the processor for the required amount of time, around 2 seconds. This delay can be adjusted in steps of the time between perforations, (approximately 10.4 ms).

Dolby Digital remains the predominant sound mixing format for movies, despite the introduction of Dolby Surround 7.1 and Dolby Atmos in 2010 and 2012, respectively.

Versions

Dolby Digital[8] has similar technologies, included in Dolby Digital EX,[9] Dolby Digital Live,[10] Dolby Digital Plus,[11] Dolby Digital Surround EX,[12] Dolby Digital Recording,[13] Dolby Digital Cinema,[14] Dolby Digital Stereo Creator[15] and Dolby Digital 5.1 Creator.[16]

Dolby Digital

Dolby AC-3
Filename extension
.ac3
Internet media type
audio/ac3
Uniform Type Identifier (UTI)public.ac3-audio[17]
The former Dolby Digital logo, entitled "Aurora", that was sometimes shown at the start of broadcasts, feature films, and video games
The old Dolby Digital logo

Dolby Digital is the common version containing up to six discrete channels of sound. The most elaborate mode in common use involves five channels for normal-range speakers (20 Hz – 20,000 Hz) (right, center, left, right surround, left surround) and one channel (20 Hz – 120 Hz allotted audio) for the subwoofer driven low-frequency effects.[18] Mono and stereo modes are also supported. AC-3 supports audio sample rates up to 48 kHz.

This format has other names:

  • Dolby Digital
  • DD (an abbreviation for Dolby Digital, often combined with channel count; for instance, DD 2.0, DD 5.1)
  • AC-3 (Audio Codec 3, Advanced Codec 3, Acoustic Coder 3. [These are backronyms. Adaptive Transform Acoustic Coding 3 is a separate format developed by Sony.])[19]
  • ATSC A/52 (name of the standard)[20]
  • Before 1996 it was marketed as Dolby Surround AC-3, Dolby Stereo Digital, and Dolby SRD.[21]

In 1991, a limited experimental release of Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country in Dolby Digital played in 3 US theatres.[21] In 1992, Batman Returns was the first movie to be released in Dolby Digital.[22][23] In 1995, the LaserDisc version of Clear and Present Danger featured the first home theater Dolby Digital mix, quickly followed by True Lies, Stargate, Forrest Gump, and Interview with the Vampire among others.[24][25]

Dolby Digital EX

Dolby Digital EX is similar to Dolby's earlier Pro Logic format, which utilized matrix technology to add a center surround channel and single rear surround channel to stereo soundtracks. EX adds an extension to the standard 5.1 channel Dolby Digital codec in the form of matrixed rear channels, creating 6.1 or 7.1 channel output.

Dolby Digital Surround EX

It provides an economical and backwards-compatible means for 5.1 soundtracks to carry a sixth, center back surround channel for improved localization of effects. The extra surround channel is matrix encoded onto the discrete left surround and right surround channels of the 5.1 mix, much like the front center channel on Dolby Pro Logic encoded stereo soundtracks. The result can be played without loss of information on standard 5.1 systems, or played in 6.1 or 7.1 on systems with Surround EX decoding and added speakers. A number of DVDs have a Dolby Digital Surround EX audio option.

The theater version of Dolby Digital Surround EX was introduced in 1999, when Dolby and THX, a division of Lucasfilm Ltd., co-developed Dolby Digital Surround EX™ for the release of Star Wars: Episode I – The Phantom Menace.[22][26] Dolby Digital Surround EX has since been used on the DVD releases of the Star Wars prequel and original trilogies.[26]

A Dolby home theater badge on a laptop computer

Dolby Digital Live

Dolby Digital Live (DDL) is a real-time encoding technology for interactive media such as video games. It converts any audio signals on a PC or game console into a 5.1-channel 16-bit/48 kHz Dolby Digital format at 640 kbit/s and transports it via a single S/PDIF cable.[27] A similar technology known as DTS Connect is available from competitor DTS. An important benefit of this technology is that it enables the use of digital multichannel sound with consumer sound cards, which are otherwise limited to digital PCM stereo or analog multichannel sound because S/PDIF over RCA, BNC, and TOSLINK can only support two-channel PCM, Dolby Digital multichannel audio, and DTS multichannel audio. HDMI was later introduced, and it can carry uncompressed multichannel PCM, lossless compressed multichannel audio, and lossy compressed digital audio. However, Dolby Digital Live is still useful with HDMI to allow transport of multichannel audio over HDMI to devices that are unable to handle uncompressed multichannel PCM.

Dolby Digital Live is available in sound cards using various manufacturers' audio chipsets. The SoundStorm, used for the Xbox game console and certain nForce2 motherboards, used an early form of this technology. DDL is available on motherboards with codecs such as Realtek's ALC882D,[28] ALC888DD and ALC888H. Other examples include some C-Media PCI sound cards and Creative Labs' X-Fi and Z series sound cards, whose drivers have enabled support for DDL.

NVIDIA later decided to drop DDL support in their motherboards due to the cost of involved royalties, leaving an empty space in this regard in the sound cards market. Then in June 2005 came Auzentech, which with its X-Mystique PCI card, provided the first consumer sound card with Dolby Digital Live support.

Initially no Creative X-Fi based sound cards supported DDL (2005~2007) but a collaboration of Creative and Auzentech resulted in the development of the Auzentech Prelude, the first X-Fi card to support DDL. Originally planned to extend DDL support to all X-Fi based sound cards (except the 'Xtreme Audio' line which is incapable of DDL hardware implementation), the plan was dropped because Dolby licensing would have required a royalty payment for all X-Fi cards and, problematically, those already sold.[29] In 2008, Creative released the X-Fi Titanium series of sound cards which fully supports Dolby Digital Live while leaving all PCI versions of Creative X-Fi still lacking support for DDL.

Since September 2008, all Creative X-Fi based sound cards support DDL (except the 'Xtreme Audio' and its derivatives such as Prodigy 7.1e, which is incapable of DDL in hardware). X-Fi's case differs.

While they forgot about the plan, programmer Daniel Kawakami made a hot issue by applying Auzentech Prelude DDL module back to Creative X-Fi cards by disguising the hardware identity as Auzentech Prelude.[30]

Creative Labs alleged Kawakami violated their intellectual property and demanded he cease distributing his modified drivers.[31][32][33]

Eventually Creative struck an agreement with Dolby Laboratories regarding the Dolby license royalty by arranging that the licensing cost be folded into the purchase price of the Creative X-Fi PCI cards rather than as a royalty paid by Creative themselves.[29] Based on the agreement, in September 2008 Creative began selling the Dolby Digital Live packs enabling Dolby Digital Live on Creative's X-Fi PCI series of sound cards. It can be purchased and downloaded from Creative. Subsequently, Creative added their DTS Connect pack to the DDL pack at no added cost.[34]

Dolby Digital Plus

Dolby E-AC-3
Internet media type
audio/eac3
Uniform Type Identifier (UTI)public.enhanced-ac3-audio[35]

E-AC-3 (Dolby Digital Plus) is an enhanced coding system based on the AC-3 codec. It offers increased bitrates (up to 6.144 Mbit/s), support for even more audio channels (up to 15.1 discrete channels[36] in the future), and improved coding techniques (only at low data rates) to reduce compression artifacts, enabling lower data rates than those supported by AC-3 (e.g. 5.1-channel audio at 256 kbit/s). It is not backward compatible with existing AC-3 hardware, though E-AC-3 codecs generally are capable of transcoding to AC-3 for equipment connected via S/PDIF. E-AC-3 decoders can also decode AC-3 bitstreams. The fourth generation Apple TV supports E-AC-3.[37] The discontinued HD DVD system directly supported E-AC-3. Blu-ray Disc offers E-AC-3 as an option to graft added channels onto an otherwise 5.1 AC-3 stream, as well as for delivery of secondary audio content (e.g. director's commentary) that is intended to be mixed with the primary audio soundtrack in the Blu-ray Disc player.

Dolby AC-4

Dolby AC-4 is an audio compression standard supporting multiple audio channels and/or audio objects. Support for 5.1 channel audio is mandatory and additional channels up to 7.1.4 are optional.[38] AC-4 provides a 50% reduction in bit rate over AC-3/Dolby Digital Plus.[38]

Dolby TrueHD

Dolby TrueHD, developed by Dolby Laboratories, is an advanced lossless audio codec based on Meridian Lossless Packing. Support for the codec was mandatory for HD DVD and is optional for Blu-ray Disc hardware. Dolby TrueHD supports 24-bit bit depths and sample rates up to 192 kHz. Maximum bitrate is 18 Mbit/s while it supports up to 16 audio channels (HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc standards currently limit the maximum number of audio channels to eight). It supports metadata, including dialog normalization and Dynamic Range Control.

Channel configurations

Although commonly associated with the 5.1 channel configuration, Dolby Digital allows a number of different channel selections. The options are:

  • Dolby Digital 1/0 – Mono (center only)
  • Dolby Digital 2/0 – 2-channel stereo (left + right), optionally carrying matrixed Dolby Surround
  • Dolby Digital 3/0 – 3-channel stereo (left, center, right)
  • Dolby Digital 2/1 – 2-channel stereo with mono surround (left, right, surround)
  • Dolby Digital 3/1 – 3-channel stereo with mono surround (left, center, right, surround)
  • Dolby Digital 2/2 – 4-channel quadraphonic (left, right, left surround, right surround)
  • Dolby Digital 3/2 – 5-channel surround (left, center, right, left surround, right surround)

These configurations optionally include the extra low-frequency effects (LFE) channel. The last two with stereo surrounds optionally use Dolby Digital EX matrix encoding to add an extra Rear Surround channel.

Many Dolby Digital decoders are equipped with downmixing to distribute encoded channels to speakers. This includes such functions as playing surround information through the front speakers if surround speakers are unavailable, and distributing the center channel to left and right if no center speaker is available. When outputting to separate equipment over a 2-channel connection, a Dolby Digital decoder can optionally encode the output using Dolby Surround to preserve surround information.

The '.1' in 5.1, 7.1 etc. refers to the LFE channel, which is also a discrete channel.

Applications

Dolby Digital audio is used on DVD-Video and other purely digital media, like home cinema. In this format, the AC-3 bitstream is interleaved with the video and control bitstreams.

The system is used in bandwidth-limited applications other than DVD-Video, such as digital TV. The AC-3 standard allows a maximum coded bit rate of 640 kbit/s. 35 mm film prints use a fixed rate of 320 kbit/s, which is the same as the maximum bit rate for 2-channel MP3. DVD-Video discs are limited to 448 kbit/s, although many players can successfully play higher-rate bitstreams (which are non-compliant with the DVD specification). HD DVD limits AC-3 to 448 kbit/s. ATSC and digital cable standards limit AC-3 to 448 kbit/s. Blu-ray Disc, the PlayStation 3 and the Xbox game console can output an AC-3 signal at a full 640 kbit/s. Some Sony PlayStation 2 console games are able to output AC-3 standard audio as well, primarily during pre-rendered cutscenes.

Dolby is part of a group of organizations involved in the development of AAC (Advanced Audio Coding), part of MPEG specifications, and considered the successor to MP3.

Dolby Digital Plus (DD-Plus) and TrueHD are supported in HD-DVD, as mandatory codecs, and in Blu-ray Disc, as optional codecs.

Dolby technologies in packaged media formats

HD DVD Blu-ray Disc DVD-Video DVD-Audio LaserDisc
Codec Player support Channels (max) Max bit rate Player support Channels (max) Max bit rate Player support Channels (max) Max bit rate Player support Channels (max) Max bit rate Player support Channels (max) Max bit rate
Dolby Digital Mandatory 5.1 504 kbit/s Mandatory 5.1 640 kbit/s Mandatory 5.1 448 kbit/s Optional in video zone for playback compatibility on DVD-Video players 5.1 448 kbit/s Optional 5.1 384 kbit/s
Dolby Digital Plus 7.1 3 Mbit/s Optional 7.1 1.7 Mbit/s
N/A
Dolby TrueHD 7.1 18 Mbit/s 7.1 18 Mbit/s

AC3RF

In the LaserDisc world AC3RF is the term widely placed on connectors of players that support Dolby Digital.[39] Specific demodulators and receivers from the LaserDisc era (1990s thru early 2000s) also include placement of this term on connectors.[39]

LaserDisc titles with Dolby Digital tracks often have THX logo on their covers.

Technical details

The data layout of AC-3 is described by simplified "C-like" language in official specifications. An AC-3 stream is a series of frames; the frame size code is used along with the sample rate code to determine the number of (2-byte) words before the next syncword. Channel blocks can be either long, in which case the entire block is processed as single modified discrete cosine transform, or short, in which case two half length transforms are performed on the block. Below is a simplified AC-3 header. A detailed description is in the ATSC "Digital Audio Compression (AC-3) (E-AC-3) Standard", section 5.4.

Field Name # of bits Description
Syncword 16 0x0B77, data transmission is left bit first: big endian
Cyclic redundancy check 16
Sampling frequency 2 '11'=reserved '10'=32 kHz '01'=44.1 '00'=48
Frame size code 6
Bit stream identification 5
Bit stream mode 3 '000'=main audio service
Audio coding mode 3 '010'=left, right channel ordering
Center mix level 2
Surround mix level 2
Dolby Surround mode 2 '00'=not indicated '01'= Not surround encoded '10'= Yes, surround encoded

License

AC3 was covered by patents that expired in March 2017. Patents were used to ask to pay a commercial license to publish an application that decodes AC3. This led some audio app developers to ban AC3 from their apps, although the open source VLC media player supported AC-3 audio without having paid a patent license fee.[40]

In Dolby's 2005 original and amended S-1 filings with the SEC, Dolby acknowledged that "Patents relating to our Dolby Digital technologies expire between 2008 and 2017."[41][42][43]

The last patent covering AC-3 expired March 20, 2017, rendering it free to use.[44][45]

Open source implementation

A free ATSC A/52 (AC3) stream decoder, liba52, is available under the GNU General Public License. FFmpeg and the VLC media player each include code for handling AC-3.

See also

  • C-Media – producer of DDL audio chipsets used in many sound cards and motherboards
  • Dialnorm – Dolby Digital metadata parameter controlling decoder gain
  • Dolby Laboratories – company history and technology development
  • Dolby noise-reduction system – analogue recording on magnetic tape, including compact cassette tapes
  • Dolby Stereo – first active matrix analogue surround sound format
  • Dolby SR – Recording process, noise reduction and expander with superior fidelity over earlier A-type system
  • Dolby Surround – Marketed consumer name of the theatrical Dolby Stereo analog surround format
  • Dolby Pro Logic – Reference active 2:4 matrix decoding system used on Dolby Stereo soundtracks and Dolby Surround [after 1987]
  • Dolby TrueHD – lossless codec for HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc
  • Dolby E – allows 6 to 8 channels of audio to be compressed into an AES3 digital audio stream
  • DTS (sound system) – formerly Digital Theater Systems
  • Home cinema
  • Loudspeaker
  • SoundStorm – a real-time AC-3 encoder included in certain nForce2 motherboards
  • THX

References

  1. Andersen, Robert Loring; Crockett, Brett Graham; Davidson, Grant A.; Davis, Mark Franklin; Fielder, Louis D.; Turner, Stephen C.; Vinton, Mark S.; Williams, Phillip (October 2004). "Introduction to Dolby Digital Plus, an Enhancement to the Dolby Digital Coding System" (PDF). Audio Engineering Society Convention (117th AES Convention): 1–29. Retrieved 17 October 2019.
  2. Ahmed, Nasir (January 1991). "How I Came Up With the Discrete Cosine Transform". Digital Signal Processing. 1 (1): 4–5. doi:10.1016/1051-2004(91)90086-Z.
  3. Princen, J.P.; Johnson, A.W.; Bradley, Alan B. (1987). "Subband/Transform coding using filter bank designs based on time domain aliasing cancellation". ICASSP '87. IEEE International Conference on Acoustics, Speech, and Signal Processing. Vol. 12. pp. 2161–2164. doi:10.1109/ICASSP.1987.1169405. S2CID 58446992.
  4. Britanak, V. (2011). "On Properties, Relations, and Simplified Implementation of Filter Banks in the Dolby Digital (Plus) AC-3 Audio Coding Standards". IEEE Transactions on Audio, Speech, and Language Processing. 19 (5): 1231–1241. doi:10.1109/TASL.2010.2087755. S2CID 897622.
  5. "A Chronology of Dolby Laboratories: May 1965-May 1998" (PDF). Film-Tech. Dolby. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 March 2006. Retrieved 15 May 2022.
  6. Luo, Fa-Long (2008). Mobile Multimedia Broadcasting Standards: Technology and Practice. Springer Science & Business Media. p. 590. ISBN 9780387782638.
  7. Fisher, Lawrence M. (12 August 1992). "COMPANY NEWS: A Sound Idea; Dolby Theater Format Adapted to Home Uses". The New York Times.
  8. "Dolby – Dolby Digital Details". Dolby Laboratories.
  9. "Dolby – What is Dolby Digital EX?". Dolby Laboratories. Archived from the original on 2009-02-27. Retrieved 2009-08-29.
  10. "Dolby – What is Dolby Digital Live?". Dolby Laboratories. Archived from the original on 2009-02-10. Retrieved 2006-03-20.
  11. "Dolby – Dolby Digital Plus Details". Dolby Laboratories.
  12. "Dolby – What is Dolby Digital Surround EX?". Dolby Laboratories. Archived from the original on 2014-06-14. Retrieved 2015-05-25.
  13. "Dolby – What is Dolby Digital Recording?". Dolby Laboratories. Archived from the original on 2011-10-10. Retrieved 2009-12-12.
  14. "Dolby – Dolby Digital Cinema Details". Dolby Laboratories. Archived from the original on 2012-03-09. Retrieved 2009-08-29.
  15. "Dolby – Dolby Digital Stereo Creator Details". Dolby Laboratories. Archived from the original on 2012-03-09. Retrieved 2009-08-29.
  16. "Dolby – What is Dolby Digital 5.1 Creator?". Dolby Laboratories. Archived from the original on 2012-03-09. Retrieved 2009-08-29.
  17. "AVFileTypeAC3". Apple Developer Documentation. Apple Inc.
  18. "Dolby-Frequently Asked Questions" (PDF). Dolby Laboratories.
  19. "Sony USA". Sony.
  20. "A/52B: Digital Audio Compression (AC-3) (E-AC-3) Standard, Rev. B". Advanced Television Systems Committee. Archived from the original on 2010-09-18. Retrieved 2010-08-06.
  21. "Movie Sound Chronology". spannerworks.net. Retrieved 2017-04-02.
  22. "History: 50 YEARS OF INNOVATION". Dolby Laboratories. Retrieved 2017-03-22.
  23. "'Batman Returns' To Try Double Dolby". The Chicago Tribune. May 13, 1992. Retrieved 2017-03-22.
  24. "Laserdisc Database Search By Date". Laserdisc Database. Retrieved 2017-04-02.
  25. "LaserDisc Database Clear and Present Danger". LaserDisc Database. Retrieved 2017-04-02.
  26. "Dolby Launches Dolby Digital Cinema in Theatres Worldwide with Star Wars Episode III: Revenge of the Sith". Dolby Investor Relations. Retrieved 2017-03-22.
  27. "Dolby Digital Live". dolby.com. Dolby Laboratories. Archived from the original on Feb 8, 2007. Retrieved Nov 16, 2021.
  28. Key, Gary (June 8, 2006). "Nvidia nForce 500: Biostar and MSI Aim for the Gold". AnandTech.
  29. "A Korean reply comment (the fifth), which explains Dolby license royalty issue of X-Fi. Since the information leaked from SoundPrime, the Korean partner of Auzentech, all sources about this information are Korean". Archived from the original on 2015-09-24. Retrieved 2009-11-27.
  30. "What Daniel_K wrote "This utility was written from scratch and does not contain any copyrighted code. Creative's director of developer relations, George Thorn told me, in a chat session, that is OK to provide mods as patches. It does not modify any executable or DLL, so it is NOT a crack." Daniel_K's driver MOD itself did not include any DDL module, until it began to support Creative's official DDL pack. Daniel_K's 'DDLUnlocker.exe' merely used disguise to install Auzentech Prelude DDL module".
  31. Beschizza, Rob (April 1, 2008). "Daniel_K, Who Fixed Creative's Broken Vista Drivers, Speaks Out". Wired.com.
  32. "There is BrokenBlaster blame about CL – Creative Labs, its much later than the issue but show common case who blame Creative Labs and admire Daniel_K". Creative Technology.
  33. Beschizza, Rob (March 31, 2008). "Silence From Sound Card Maker After Customer Revolt". Wired.
  34. "Dolby Digital Live pack, its DDL pack but also say "Get DTS Connect Pack FREE! for every purchase of Dolby Digital Live Pack."". Creative Technology.
  35. "AVFileTypeEnhancedAC3". Apple Developer Documentation. Apple Inc.
  36. "Dolby Digital Plus Audio Coding Tech Paper" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-05-02. Retrieved 2017-04-24.
  37. "Apple TV – Tech Specs". Retrieved 1 January 2017.
  38. "Dolby AC-4: Audio Delivery for Next-Generation Entertainment Services" (PDF). Dolby Laboratories. 2015-06-01. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2019-05-30. Retrieved 2016-04-26.
  39. "LaserDisc Database – Help – AC3RF / Dolby Digital".
  40. VideoLAN. "VideoLAN – VLC – Features". Retrieved 1 January 2017.
  41. "SEC Form S-1". ADOBE investor relations website. Retrieved 2017-03-22.
  42. "SEC Form S-1". United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) EDGAR system, filed November 19, 2004. Retrieved 2017-03-22.
  43. "Amendment No. 1 to SEC Form S-1". United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) EDGAR system, amended February 12, 2005. Retrieved 2017-03-22.
  44. "The last patent on AC-3 (Dolby Digital) expires at midnight | Hacker News". news.ycombinator.com. Retrieved 2017-05-06.
  45. "AC3 Freedom Day – s". Ac3freedomday.org. Retrieved 2022-02-17.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.