Brief introduction – RGBLink RMS 5533 User Manual

Page 17

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1. Brief Introduction

Terms and Definitions

RMS 5533 User Manual 17

separate scaler for each video window.


“Polarity”: The positive and negative orientation of a signal. Polarity

usually refers to the direction or a level with respect to a reference (e.g.

positive sync polarity means that sync occurs when the signal is going

in the positive direction).


“RJ-45”: Registered Jack-45. A connector similar to a telephone

connector that holds up to eight wires used for connecting Ethernet

devices.


RS-232”: An Electronic Industries Association (EIA) serial digital

interface standard specifying the characteristics of the communication

path between two devices using either DB-9 or DB-25 connectors.

This standard is used for relatively short-range communication and

does not specify balanced control lines. RS-232 is a serial control

standard with a set number of conductors, data rate, word length, and

type of connector to be used. The standard specifies component

connection standards with regard to the computer interface. It is also

called RS-232-C, which is the third version of the RS-232 standard,

and is functionally identical to the CCITT V.24 standard.

“Saturation”: Chroma, chroma gain. The intensity of the color, or the

extent to which a given color in any image is free from white. The less

white in a color, the truer the color or the greater its saturation. On a

display device, the color control adjusts the saturation. Not to be

confused with the brightness, saturation is the amount of pigment in a

color, and not the intensity. Low saturation is like adding white to the

color. For example, a low-saturated red looks pink.


“Scaling”: A conversion of a video or computer graphic signal from a

starting resolution to a new resolution. Scaling from one resolution to

another is typically done to optimize the signal for input to an image

processor, transmission path or to improve its quality when presented

on a particular display.


“SDI”: Serial Digital Interface. The standard based on a 270 Mbps

transfer rate. This is a 10-bit, scrambled, polarity independent interface

with common scrambling for both component ITU-R 601 and

composite digital video and four channels of (embedded) digital audio.


“Seamless Switching”: A feature found on many video switchers. This

feature causes the switcher to wait until the vertical interval to switch.

This avoids a glitch (temporary scrambling) which normally is seen

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