What is the difference between .mkv and .j2c?
- Extension
- .mkv
- .j2c
- Format
- Binary
- Binary
- Category
- Video
- Raster Image
- Developer
- Matroska
- Joint Photographic Experts Group
- Description
- An MKV file is a video container format similar to the .AVI, .ASF, and .MOV formats. It supports several types of audio and video codecs and may include .SRT, .SSA, or .USF (Universal Subtitle Format) subtitles. MKV files also support VobSub subtitles from DVDs.
- The JPEG 2000 Code Stream (j2c) file format is a type of image file format that is part of the JPEG 2000 family of image standards. This format is specifically designed for encoding images in a highly efficient manner, allowing for both lossless (exact reproduction) and lossy (approximate) compression. The j2c format focuses on the core coding stream of JPEG 2000 images, representing the encoded image data without additional metadata or structure.
- MIME Type
- video/x-matroska
- image/jp2
- Sample
- sample.mkv
- sample.j2c
- Wikipedia
- .mkv on Wikipedia
- .j2c on Wikipedia