The evaluation codec for Adaptive Scalable Texture Compression (ASTC) technology is now available on GitHub, making it easier for you to access, browse and contribute feedback. Previously the ASTC codec was released as a ZIP archive, including the source code and example binaries, however we wanted to use GitHub to bring ASTC to the heart of the developer open-source community.
ASTC technology developed by ARM and AMD is an official extension to both the OpenGL and OpenGL ES graphics APIs. ASTC is a major step forward in terms of image quality, reducing memory bandwidth and thus energy use. It is the outcome of many years of research, development and engineering, and it is now implemented in a number of GPUs across the whole industry.
ASTC is widely supported by all major hardware vendors and it is free to use. Google’s Android Extension Pack (GL_ANDROID_extension_pack_es31a) also requires support for ASTC. If you are a game developer, Unreal Engine 4 and Unity 4.3 already support ASTC and for those of you building your own game engine, you can clone the GitHub repository to start using ASTC yourself.
A number of cutting-edge developer tools also support ASTC such as:
For the technical details on ASTC, please refer to the blog posts by Tom Olson and Sean Ellis.
With the source code available on GitHub, it is even easier for every developer to access, clone, browse and contribute feedback and improvements. Since ASTC is a standard, the whole community benefits from it, and there is now a straightforward way to share fixes and new features.
I remember one of my former colleagues in Norway, Karl Anders Øygard, speaking about this in 2000.
He said "it would be very useful for streaming video on mobile phones using a compression like this."
-Of course, it was not made back then, but I find it quite impressive that he was thinking how such compressions could work.
Today we have the technology, which is fast enough to do this - and even hardware support. It's just amazing.
I wouldn't be surprised, if he contributed to this project.