HUAWEI TE80 Videoconferencing Endpoint
Administrator Guide
E Terminology
Issue 02 (2014-03-30)
Huawei Proprietary and Confidential
Copyright © Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
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720p
720p is the shorthand name for a category of HDTV video modes.
The number 720 stands for the 720 horizontal scan lines of display
resolution (also known as 720 pixels of vertical resolution), while the
letter p stands for progressive scan or non-interlaced. When broadcast
at 60 frames per second, 720p features the highest temporal (motion)
resolution possible under the ATSC standard. Progressive scanning
reduces the need to prevent flicker by filtering out fine details, so
sharpness is much closer to 1080i than the number of scan lines
would suggest.
B
broadcast (site)
All sites, except for the site being broadcast, view the site that is
broadcast. On the Broadcast Site screen, users can choose between
Broadcast Single and Broadcast in Turn.
broadcast single
(site)
Broadcast one specified site.
C
call absent (sites)
Place calls to all the sites that are on the site list but are absent from
the conference.
call site
Place a call to a site to add the site to the conference.
cascading
Multiple MCUs are connected in series at different layers to allow the
number of participants to expand beyond what a single MCU can
support. In cascading mode, an MCU in an upper layer can control an
MCU in a lower layer.
camera preset
Users can control a camera by zooming, panning, and tilting the
camera or changing the focus. Then, users can store this camera
position and assign a number to this position. This preset position is a
camera preset. During a conference, users can move the camera to a
camera preset by selecting the relevant number.
CIF
CIF (Common Intermediate Format), also known as FCIF (Full
Common Intermediate Format), is a format used to standardize the
horizontal and vertical resolutions in pixels of YCbCr sequences in
video signals, commonly used in video teleconferencing systems. It
was first proposed in the H.261 standard.
continuous
presence
A feature in multi-point conferencing that allows the video endpoint
to see images from multiple video endpoints at the same time. All
parties remain continuously visible or 'present' for the duration of the
call and the user can have control over the screen layout. Continuous
presence is better suited for team collaboration since it allows
participants to see the reactions (body language) of all participants,
not just the speaker.
D
delete site
Remove a site from the site list.