Pioneer PRV-9000 Manuel d'utilisateur Page 140

  • Télécharger
  • Ajouter à mon manuel
  • Imprimer
  • Page
    / 150
  • Table des matières
  • MARQUE LIVRES
  • Noté. / 5. Basé sur avis des utilisateurs
Vue de la page 139
PRV-9000 Operating Instructions
PBC is a system to navigate a Video CD through on-screen menus recorded onto
the disc. An example of a disc using this technology is a karaoke disc where the
disc is not normally played from beginning to end.
Progressive Scan Video
Also called non-interlaced Video, progressive scan is a method of updating all
lines in a displayed picture in a single pass. The picture is more stable and
flicker-free unlike an interlaced video image.
PureCinema
Video on a DVD disc may be videotaped material (originally shot on video) or film
footage (originally shot on film stock). Video source has a frame rate of 30
frames/second, compared to film with a frame rate of 24 frames/second. This
recorder converts film material to 60 frames/second (in progressive scan mode).
PureCinema adjusts the picture quality comparable to a cinema screen. To
check a sequence for origination (videotape or film), display the transfer rate. If a
pound sign (#) appears above the transfer rate data then the segment is from a
film source.
Regions (DVD only)
Regions associate discs and players/recorders with a particular area of the world.
This unit only plays discs with compatible region codes. The recorder’s region
code is stamped on the back panel close to the serial number. Some discs are
compatible with more than one region.
Sampling Frequency
Sampling frequency refers to the rate at which sound is measured when being
turned in to digital audio data. Higher rates equal better sound quality. However,
more digital information generates with the higher rates. Standard CD Audio has
a sampling frequency of 44.1kHz, which translates to 44,100 samples
(measurements) per second. See also Digital Audio.
Title (DVD only)
A title is a collection of chapters on a DVD disc. See also Chapter.
Track
Audio CDs and Video CDs use tracks to divide content on a disc. The DVD
equivalent is called a chapter. See also Chapter.
For additional technological words and terms, refer to the DVD FAQ website.
(Author: Jim Taylor http://dvddemystified.com/dvdfaq.html
)
132
Vue de la page 139
1 2 ... 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 ... 149 150

Commentaires sur ces manuels

Pas de commentaire