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Digital Video
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Digital Video
Digital video is the case where the original image is generated, in the camera, in the form of pixels. When reading this, we may intuitively feel that an image produced this way is inferior to an analog image. An analog image seems to have infinite resolution, whereas a digital image has a fixed, finite resolution that cannot be increased without loss of image quality. In practice, however, the high resolution of analog images is not an advantage, since we view them on a television screen or a computer monitor in a certain, fixed resolution. Digital video, on the other hand, has the following important advantages:
1. It can be easily edited. This makes it possible to produce special effects. Computergenerated images, such as spaceships or cartoon characters, can be combined with reallife action to produce complex, realistic-looking effects. The images of an actor in a movie can be edited to make him look young at the beginning and old later. Editing software for digital video is already available for most computer platforms. Users can edit a video file and attach it to an email message, thus creating vmail. Multimedia applications, where text, sound, still images, and video are integrated, are common today and involve editing video.
2. It can be stored on any digital medium, such as hard disks, removable cartridges, CD-ROMs, or DVDs. An error-correcting code can be added, if needed, for increased reliability. This makes it possible to duplicate a long movie or transmit it between computers without loss of quality (in fact, without a single bit getting corrupted). In contrast, analog video is typically stored on tape, each copy is slightly inferior to the original, and the medium is subject to wear.
3. It can be compressed. This allows for more storage (when video is stored on a digital medium) and also for fast transmission. Sending compressed video between computers makes video telephony possible, which, in turn, makes video conferencing possible. Transmitting compressed video also makes it possible to increase the capacity of television cables and thus add channels. Digital video is, in principle, a sequence of images, called frames, displayed at a certain frame rate (so many frames per second, or fps) to create the illusion of animation. This rate, as well as the image size and pixel depth, depend heavily on the application. Surveillance cameras, for example, use the very low frame rate of five fps, while HDTV displays 25 fps.
Even the most economic application, a surveillance camera, generates 5×640×480×12 = 18,432,000 bits per second! This is equivalent to more than 2.3 million bytes per second, and this information has to be saved for at least a few days before it can be deleted. Most video applications also involve sound. It is part of the overall video data and has to be compressed with the video image. There are few video applications do not include sound. Three common examples are: (1) Surveillance camera, (2) an old, silent movie being restored and converted from film to video, and (3) a video presentation taken underwater. A complete piece of video is sometimes called a presentation. It consists of a number of acts, where each act is broken down into several scenes. A scene is made of several shots or sequences of action, each a succession of frames, where there is a small change in scene and camera position between consecutive frames. The hierarchy is thus piece- act- scene- sequence- frame.
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