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Access Time
Amount of time it takes a CD-ROM or DVD drive to find and
display the requested information. Although specified widely,
access times must be used with care because there is no
measuring standard. It is generally regarded to include radial
positioning time (the head moves to the appropriate track),
plus settling time (stops vibrating), plus latency (wait for
beginning of block with the wanted data), all of which take
much more time than the final read and display step. Top
Aspect Ratio
The height to width ratio in PC and TV monitors. In DVD Video,
the video display frame can have different rectangular shapes,
determined by its recording aspect ratio (4:3 or 16:9). DVD
Video also offers panoramic and letter-box display formats
(options). Obviously, not all TV sets offer a 'wide screen'
option, and viewing a film using the improper aspect ratio
leaves dark (unused) areas or bands in the screen. Top
CSS (Content Scrambling System),
Macrovision
Implemented by the DVD Consortium, implements the Analog
Protection System (APS) and the Data Encryption Standard (DES),
to protect the contents of a DVD Video title from being
downloaded or dumped and reused. One major option that
implements the APS is Macrovision (to degrade the analog stream
being copied). The technology involves special DES algorithms
to scramble critical sectors of the DVD Video, creation of
special 'keys' for guiding the descrambling process by chips in
the DVD-player, and use of an APS to prevent an analog signal
be diverted or captured 'clear' or at high quality (before it
reaches the monitor or TV screen). Matsushita, developers of
the CSS, license it for free. Macrovision licenses its APS
product for free to hardware manufacturers, and requires
royalties from content publishers. Top
Dolby AC3
This is Dolby Digital audio, using AC-3 compression (from a
source PCM stream), sampled at 48 kHz, and 16 bits. This is one
of the digital audio formats that are included in the DVD Video
specifications required for DVD Video titles for NTSC
countries. It involves 1 to 5.1 channel surround-sound, and is
of higher quality than the CD-Digital Audio. Top
DTS
Dolby Tru-Surround. All DVD players are
DTS compatible. They pass the digital audio information onto
the audio amplifier which then decodes it. If your DVD player
has a DTS decoder built in then this conversion is done inside
the DVD player and is output as 6 seperate analogue channels
which are then passed to the amplifying equipment. Top
Capacity Of A
DVD
The DVD capacities for 12cm and the much forgotten 8cm disc,
which involves single and double-layer, as well as single and
double sided discs, are shown in the following list below.
- Single Side, Single Layer (aka DVD-5) 8cm=1.4Gb
12cm=4.7Gb
- Single Side, Double Layer (aka DVD-9) 8cm=2.6Gb
12cm=8.5Gb
- Double Side, Single Layer (aka DVD-10) 8cm=2.9Gb
12cm=9.4Gb
- Double Side, Double Layer (aka DVD-18) 8cm=5.3Gb
12cm=17Gb
DVD R is implemented with a capacity of 3.95GB, and DVD RAM
with a capacity of 2.66GB, although it is expected that those
capacities will increase in their 'second generation.' An
average video stream of 4.7 Mbits/sec leads to 133 minutes
playing time per single layer. Top
Laser
Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation was
demonstrated about half a century ago, with an original ruby
laser. Today, lasers are everywhere to suit many diverse
technologies and applications. Tests of blue, blue- green, and
blue-purple lasers of higher precision, have been carried out
which will make possible higher density optical discs.
Ultraviolet lasers produce heat and require cooling, just as do
the barely visible violet Krypton gas lasers. Cooling and size
requirements are key to the implementation of a laser to
optical disc technologies. Mastering plants use sophisticated
Laser Beam Recorders with low wavelength (@350nm) ultraviolet
or argon lasers. Top
Linear PCM
Linear Pulse Control Modulation is a string of sampling codes
in a digital audio file, a code for each sample. Linear PCM
does not involve any compression techniques, and can be used in
DVD as it is, or as base for a compressed format. Top
Mounting
Mounting is the term used for the time taken for a player to
recognise what type of disc has been inserted. Mounting times
can vary tremendously depending on the type of media on the
disc. Mounting times of under 1 second are commonplace for
audio CD's in dedicated CD players but DVD's may take up to 20
seconds to mount and start playing. Top
MPEG
A Codec adopted by ISO's Motion Pictures
Expert Group for compression and playback of full
motion video and audio streams. Often referred to as 'MPEG
video.' MPEG-1 is now an open standard which establishes the
structure for a standard MPEG file, and specifies a transfer
rate of 1.5Mb/sec, with a resolution of 352x240 at 30 fps.
Incidentally, CD-I uses MPEG-1, and VCD was promoted as the
first MPEG1 optical disc for multiple platforms. DVD implements
'hardware' MPEG 2 and offers higher resolution, uniform
quality, different aspect ratios, and more features than MPEG
1. MPEG 2 and AC 3 Audio do the decoding together. In some
circles, hardware MPEG 2 is still considered a temporary
solution in the wait for a software solution (current software
decoders require powerful CPUs, ample RAM, and MMx at least).
Top
MPEG Audio
This is a digital multichannel audio format, which uses a
source PCM stream to compress it at a sample rate of 48kHz,
sample size 16 bits. DVD supports MPEG 1 and MPEG 2 audio
formats: 2.0, 5.1, or 7.1 channel audio, at 48 kHz/sec, or
Dolby Digital AC 3, 5.1 channel audio at 48 Khz/sec, as well as
16 to 24 bit Linear Pulse Control Modulation (LPCM), at 48 or
96 KHz/sec. Top
NTSC
The National Television Standards
Committee supports the NTSC signal and display
technology used in the TV industries of North America, Japan,
and a few other countries. It specifies 525 lines/screen, and
29-30 frames/sec. Top
PAL
Phase Alternation Line. A television
standard that is used by European, Asian and some Latin
American Countries. It specifies 768 pixels/line, 576
lines/screen and 25 frames/sec. Top
PCM
Pulse Code Modulation is used to sample
analog audio into digital code (generally, 8000 samples/sec),
and to structure the analog signal that is produced by the
digital-analogue converter of a CD-Audio player. The digital
audio string is often referred to as Linear PCM, or also as
just PCM. Top
Pits
During optical encoding, pulses of a high power laser beam
'burn' microscopic 'pits' on the recording layer. The untouched
spaces between such pits are called 'lands.' During the read
process, the laser light focuses on the spinning spiral track,
and since the pits reflect light less intensely, the read head
detects the changes in reflectivity, and those transitions are
processed as is to produce a binary data stream. In CD-ROM, the
track pitch is 1.6 microns, and the pits are .83 microns wide.
In DVD, the track pitch is 0.74 microns, and the pits are 0.4
microns wide. Maximum pit lengths are 10 times pit width. Top
Pixel
A Picture Element, used mainly in graphics and
video circles, is the smallest unit of display that can be
given colour and intensity values or codes. The larger the
number of bits per pixel, the higher the range of colors that
can be displayed. Top
Protective Coating
Optical discs are given a clear plastic or lacquer coat that
protects the metallic layer. Even with this coating, small
scratches, pressure, dirt and other markings can make the disc
unreadable. It is only designed to protect the disc under
careful handling conditions. The coating also prevents air from
reaching and oxidizing the metallized layer which would render
the disc unreadable. Top
RCE
Regional Coding Enhancement allows the
disc to detect if a player is region specific (as required by
the CSS licensing agreement), or if it has been altered to be
"region free" (i.e. region 0). If the player is "region free"
the RCE will not allow the disc to be played. It will instead
display a message on the television advising the consumer that
the machine is not authorized to play the DVD in question.
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Current RCE Titles (Affects Region 1 Only)
- 6th Day
- All The Pretty Horses
- The Brothers
- Charlie's Angels
- Finding Forester
- Joe Dirto Hollow Man
- A Knight's Tale
- The Patriot
- Saving Silverman
- Snatch
- South Park : Chefs Experience
- South Park : Xmas in South Park
- Thomas Tank & Magic Railroad
- Tomcats
- Urban Legend Final Cut
(Last Updated 25/10/01) Top
Region Code
Areas
Also referred to as Country Codes, or Zone Locks, these are
optional codes that the movie industry imposed on DVD-Video
specifications. Players are generally coded by region, and
these players will not play DVDs coded for a different region.
DVDs with no regional codes will be played by any DVD player.
Players that are auto or selectable Multi-Region (rather
than Region Free) are reputed to play any DVD from any
region.
Region code areas are divided into 6 (at the moment) areas
throughout the world. These are
- Region 1 - Canada, U.S., U.S. Territories
- Region 2 - Japan, Europe, South Africa, Middle
East (including Egypt)
- Region 3 - Southeast Asia, East Asia (including
Hong Kong, Taiwan)
- Region 4 - Australia, New Zealand, Pacific
Islands, Central America, Mexico, S. America, Caribbean
- Region 5 - Former Soviet Union, Indian
subcontinent, Africa (Also N. Korea, Mongolia)
- Region 6 - China
Top
Sampling
Sampling is part of analog to digital conversion. Essentially,
the analog signal is sampled at an specific rate and quantized,
which means a numerical value is matched to each sample, and
that value is convened to binary code. Although the frequency
of sampling is important for continuity, the size of the sample
(in bits) is important for depth of quality. Top
Scart Socket
Scart sockets and their respective leads are used to make a
quick and effective connection between AV equipment and
TV's/Video's. They have 21 pins in total and their respective
jobs are listed thus:

- Audio Output (1) Right channel 0.5V RMS
- Audio Input (1) Right Channel 0.5V RMS
- Audio Output (2) Left Channel 0.5V RMS
- GND (Audio)
- GND
- Audio Input (2) Left Channel 0.5V RMS
- RGB Input, BLUE (B)
- Switch Signal Video (status)
- GND
- Clock Signals
- RGB Input, GREEN (G)
- Remote Control
- GND
- GND Switch Signal RGB
- RGB Input, RED (R)
- Switch Signal RGB
- GND (Video)
- GND
- Video Output 1V p-p
- Video Input 1V p-p
- Shield
Top
Title (DVD)
In DVD Video, a title is an independent or self-contained
program, usually a whole movie or TV program episode. A DVD can
contain more than one title. Obviously the amount of titles on
any given DVD depends on the size of the titles. Top
TOC
Table Of Contents generally implies a
list of the files and addresses of a CD-ROM application. The
TOC is in the lead-in area of a CD, and can hold 99 addresses
(which is therefore the number of tracks that a CD can have).
In current multisession applications, each session involves its
own table of contents and the application scans the disc and
begins to read the last table of contents first. Top
Variable Bit Rate
DVD specifies a Constant Linear Velocity (CLV) of 3.49 m/s,
giving a transfer rate of 11.08 Mbits/sec, although 9.8
Mbits/see is the top usable limit. But MPEG-2 implements
variable bit rate encoding (often called variable rate
bitstream encoding), because it helps to optimize quality in
the program video stream while catering for maximum
compression. Essentially, the sequences with high level of
motion are allowed higher data rates than the sequences with
low levels of motion. It uses track buffers, intermittent
reads, and even a complete double pass process to achieve a
high quality data stream within the allocated bandwidth
(variable bit rate decoding for the video, the audio streams,
and the subtitles). Obviously, the average bit rate in
DVD-Video depends on the complexity of the video application,
and can be anywhere up to the top limit. In the literature, a
bit rate of 4.7 Mbits/sec is generally used along with 133
minutes of high quality video to describe DVD Video performance
from a single sided, single layer disc. Top
(VCD)Video CD
A Video CD uses a format that is rarely seen nowadays. It
looks the same as a music CD or a CD-ROM, except that instead
of music or software, it holds movies, using compressed MPEG-1
video files. VCD has a resolution of 352x288 (PAL) or 352x240
(NTSC), and has a quality which is roughly comparable to VHS.
Top
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