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OGV vs WMV

OGV vs WMV

A detailed comparison of OGV Video and Windows Media Video — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.

OGV

OGV Video

Video Files

OGV (Ogg Video) is an open video format using Theora codec in an Ogg container.

About OGV files
WMV

Windows Media Video

Video Files

WMV is a Microsoft proprietary video format from the Windows Media framework. It was common in the early 2000s and still appears in corporate and legacy environments.

About WMV files

Strengths Comparison

OGV Strengths

  • Patent-free codec (Theora) and container (Ogg).
  • Mandatory for Wikipedia uploads — preserves public-domain video.
  • Good for small educational clips.
  • Open-source reference implementations.

WMV Strengths

  • Good quality-to-bitrate ratio for its era (early 2000s).
  • Native Windows playback since 1999.
  • Single-vendor tooling reliable inside the Microsoft ecosystem.
  • VC-1 variant was Blu-ray certified.

Limitations

OGV Limitations

  • Compression lags H.264 by ~40% at equal quality.
  • Hardware decoders never adopted Theora.
  • WebM (VP9/AV1) is the modern open-codec choice.
  • iOS and Safari never supported Theora natively.

WMV Limitations

  • Proprietary — poor Mac and Linux support.
  • DRM variants broke the "owned content" promise when license servers retired.
  • Overtaken by H.264/HEVC — no meaningful modern deployment.
  • Windows 11 deprecated Windows Media Player; the ecosystem is essentially frozen.

Technical Specifications

Specification OGV WMV
MIME type video/ogg video/x-ms-wmv
Extension .ogv .wmv
Container Ogg ASF (Advanced Systems Format)
Video codec Theora (typical); Dirac, VP8 (rare)
Audio codec Vorbis, Opus, FLAC
Codecs WMV 7/8/9, VC-1
Audio WMA (usually)

Typical File Sizes

OGV

  • Short educational clip (1 min, 480p) 8-15 MB
  • Wikipedia demo video 5-50 MB

WMV

  • 10-min clip (2 Mbps) 150 MB
  • 45-min episode (3 Mbps) 1 GB
  • 2-hour HD movie (VC-1) 4-8 GB

Ready to convert?

Convert between OGV and WMV online, free, and without installing anything. Encrypted upload, automatic deletion after 2 hours.

Frequently Asked Questions

OGV (OGV Video) is a video container format that bundles one or more video streams, audio tracks, and optional subtitles into a single file. The container format determines how metadata is organised and which codecs can live inside; the visual quality itself depends on the codec (H.264, H.265, VP9, AV1) rather than the OGV wrapper. It is part of the video files family.

WMV (Windows Media Video) is a video container format that bundles one or more video streams, audio tracks, and optional subtitles into a single file. The container format determines how metadata is organised and which codecs can live inside; the visual quality itself depends on the codec (H.264, H.265, VP9, AV1) rather than the WMV wrapper. It is part of the video files family.

VLC, MPV and PotPlayer play nearly every OGV file on desktop. Browser support varies: modern Chromium, Firefox and Safari play common containers via the HTML5 <video> tag, but niche OGV variants may fail. If a device refuses your OGV, convert to MP4 with our OGV to MP4 converter for universal playback.

VLC, MPV and PotPlayer play nearly every WMV file on desktop. Browser support varies: modern Chromium, Firefox and Safari play common containers via the HTML5 <video> tag, but niche WMV variants may fail. If a device refuses your WMV, convert to MP4 with our WMV to MP4 converter for universal playback.

Upload your OGV to KaijuConverter and pick MP4, MOV, MKV, WebM, or any other target. Our pipeline uses FFmpeg under the hood and stream-copies when codecs are compatible (no quality loss) or transcodes at high-quality defaults otherwise. Conversion runs server-side; both files delete within two hours.

Only when the target requires re-encoding. If the codecs inside OGV match what the target container supports, FFmpeg stream-copies the streams and the output is bit-identical to the source. Transcoding uses transparent quality defaults (CRF 20–23 H.264) and produces output indistinguishable from the original at normal viewing distance.