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AC-3
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Dolby Digital Surround
Sound System. A digitally compressed audio format characterized
by its ability to offer as many as six separate digital
audio channels. AC-3 is used for DVD-Video titles in
the NTSC format. PAL titles use MPEG-2 audio compression
standard.
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Artifacts
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Unusual or unwanted. Examples
of artifacts include flicker, jitter, degradation of
resolution, and aspect ratio abnormalities.
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Bandwidth
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The amount of data that
can be transferred or processed per unit of time. In
simple terms bandwidth is like pipe size - the larger
the pipe, the more it can carry.
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Bitrate
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The data rate of the DVD
title, expressed in Mbs (megabits per second). DVD bitrates
are usually between 2 and 10 Mbs. The higher the bitrate,
the more CPU required to playback the disc.
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Brightness
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The value of a pixel along
the black-white axis. WinDVD allows the user to control
the brightness of the video window.
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CBR
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Constant bit-rate. This
type of compressed video signal uses the same amount
of data to describe the video signal regardless of complexity.
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Chapters
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Video programs can be
split up into titles, and then further into chapters.
For example, on a disc with multiple sporting events;
each event may be designated as a separate title. Each
period in the individual sporting event or title may
be designated a chapter.
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Compression
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Converting data into a
more compact form for storage or transmission.
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CSS
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"Content Scramble
System". The official DVD-Video digital encryption
scheme. Only a CSS-licensed DVD player can unscramble
the video data.
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Data rate
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The speed of a data transfer
process, usually expressed in kilobytes (thousands of
bytes) per second.
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Decode
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Decompressing a video
clip and then converting its color.
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Decompress
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Converting video and audio
data from a compressed form back into its original form.
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Dolby Digital
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* Dolby's multichannel
audio format, also know as AC-3. Dolby Digital is a
standard for DVD audio encoding.
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DVD
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An acronym for Digital
Versatile Disc, an optical-disc technology developed
by the DVD Consortium. There are five specified DVD
disc varieties. DVD-ROM, DVD-Video, DVD-Audio, DVD-R
(recordable), DVD-RAM (eraseable).
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DVD X Copy
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Software that can backup
a DVD movie to one or more blank DVD's using a DVD
burner. |
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Encode
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Converting the color space
of a video clip from a full-bandwidth source to a compressed
MPEG-2 file.
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Field
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One half of a video frame,
consisting of every other scan line, in interlaced video
content.
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Frame
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One video image in a series.
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Frame rate
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The number of frames per
second at which a video clip is displayed.
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Full motion video
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Content that shows 30
(interlaced) or 24 (film content) frames per second.
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Gigabyte
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Literally, a billion bytes.
A Gigabyte in DVD represents exactly 1 billion bytes
of data.
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Highlight
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An active or focused subtitle.
When you move your mouse pointer over a menu command,
that command often changes color. It is then the "highlighted"
subtitle.
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Interlacing
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Drawing a frame by alternately
drawing the rows of each field. For example, an NTSC
broadcast is expressed as 30 frames per second, but
is actually made up of 60 half-frames displayed one
after the other. The alternative is de-interlacing,
where only complete frames are drawn on the screen.
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Jitter
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The smoothness of frame
delivery over time.
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Luminance
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The part of a video signal
that includes information about its brightness.
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MPEG
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Motion Picture Expert
Group. MPEG-1 is used on video CD and CD-I as a video
distribution medium. MPEG-2 and DVD offer better-than-laserdisc
quality and twice the runtime per disc.
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MPEG Audio
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Compressed audio for use
on DVD projects. PCM or MPEG stereo audio is required
for PAL countries for DVD, but MPEG-2 audio is optional
worldwide.
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Multimedia
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Any format that contains
more than one media, such as text, still images, sound,
animation, and video.
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Navigation
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Accessing the features
of a DVD-Video disc using the specific commands.
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NTSC
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National Television Systems
Committee. A committee of the Electronic Industries
Association that prepared the standards for commercial
television broadcasting in the United States, Canada,
Japan, and parts of Central and South America. NTSC
format has 525 scan lines (rows) of resolution at thirty
frames per second (30 Hz).
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PAL
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Phase Alteration Line.
This standard is used for commercial broadcasting in
most of Europe, Australia, and parts of Central and
South America. PAL format displays at 625 scan lines
(rows) of resolution at 25 frames per second (25 Hz).
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Pixel
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Picture cell. This is
the smallest independent unit of a digital image.
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Pixel depth
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The number of bits of
color information per pixel.
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Regional Coding
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DVD players may be hard-coded
to accept only DVD discs encoded for use in one of six
designated world regions. This technique was developed
to enable Motion Picture companies to release movies
at different times in
different regions.
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Resolution
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The number of pixels in
the width and height of the video window.
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Subtitle
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Subtitles are the graphics
displayed on top of video content. An example of a subtitle
would be the menu choices displayed over the background
graphic for many interactive games. When a subtitle
is active, it is called a
highlight. Subtitles are also the actual text of
the content, displayed on the bottom of the screen.
These subtitles are often used for language translations.
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Titles
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Video programs can be
split up into titles, and then further into chapters.
For example, on a disc with multiple sporting events;
each event may be designated as a separate title. Each
period in the individual sporting event or title may
be designated a chapter.
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VBR
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Variable bit-rate. This
allows DVD compression methods to use more or less compression
according to the complexity of the picture.
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