Glossary
GLOSSARY
The process of transferring 24-frames/sec film format into video by repeating each frame (used for PAL DVD’s) as two video fields.
( AD )
Method used to map the 24 fps of film onto the 30 fps (60 fields) or 25 fps (50 fields), so that one film frame occupies three video
fields, the next two, etc. It means the two fields of every other video frame come from different film frames making operations
such as rotoscoping impossible, and requiring care in editing. Some sophisticated equipment can unravel the 3:2 sequence to
allow frame-by-frame treatment and subsequently re-compose 3:2. The 3:2 sequence repeats every five video frames and four film
frames, the latter identified as A-D. Only film frame A is fully on a video frame and so exists at one time code only, making it the
editable point of the video sequence.
Alpha Blending enables the ability to add transparency to any selected source.
Undesirable elements or defects in a video picture. These may occur naturally in the video process and must be eliminated in
order to achieve a high-quality picture. Most common in analog are cross color and cross luminance. Most common in digital are
macroblocks, which resemble pixelation of the video image.
Sometimes also called chroma key. This is a method of combining two video images. An example of chroma keying in action is the
nightly news person standing in front of a weather map. In reality, the person is standing in front of a blue or green background and
the camera image is mixed with a computer-generated weather map. This is how it works: a TV camera is pointed at the person
and fed along with the image of the weather map into a box. Inside the box, a decision is made. Wherever it sees the blue or green
background, it displays the weather map. Otherwise, it shows the person. So, whenever the person moves around, the box figures
out where he is, and displays the appropriate image.
A color space is a mathematical representation for a color. For example, the RGB color space is based on a Cartesian coordinate
system.
Dynamic host configuration protocol. DHCP is a communications protocol that lets network administrators manage centrally and
automate the assignment of IP addresses in an organization’s network. Using the Internet Protocol, each machine that can connect
to the Internet needs a unique IP address. When an organization sets up its computer users with a connection to the Internet,
an IP address must be assigned to each machine. Without DHCP, the IP address must be entered manually at each computer
and, if computers move to another location in another part of the network, a new IP address must be entered. DHCP lets a network
administrator supervise and distribute IP addresses from a central point and automatically sends a new IP address when a computer
is plugged into a different place in the network.
The transfer characteristics of most cameras and displays are nonlinear. For a display, a small change in amplitude when the signal
level is small produces a change in the display brightness level, but the same change in amplitude at a high level will not produce the
same magnitude of brightness change. This nonlinearity is known as gamma. Different gamma curves are available to compensate
the nonlinearity.
Address installed in the projector to be individually controlled.
Native white of the projector (non calibrated white).
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