Ensemble Designs BrightEye 5 Analog Composite TBC and Frame Sync User Manual

Page 24

Advertising
background image

www.ensembledesigns.com

BrightEye 5 - Page 24

5

Analog Composite TBC and Frame Sync User Guide

MPEG

The Moving Picture Experts Group is an industry group that develops standards for the compression

of moving pictures for television. Their work is an on-going effort. The understanding of image

processing and information theory is constantly expanding. And the raw bandwidth of both the

hardware and software used for this work is ever increasing. Accordingly, the compression methods

available today are far superior to the algorithms that originally made the real-time compression and

decompression of television possible. Today, there are many variations of these techniques, and the

term MPEG has to some extent become a broad generic label.

Metadata

This word comes from the Greek, meta means ‘beyond’ or ‘after’. When used as a prefix to ‘data’, it can

be thought of as ‘data about the data’. In other words, the metadata in a data stream tells you about

that data – but it is not the data itself. In the television industry, this word is sometimes used correctly

when, for example, we label as metadata the timecode which accompanies a video signal. That

timecode tells you something about the video, i.e. when it was shot, but the timecode in and of itself

is of no interest. But in our industry’s usual slovenly way in matters linguistic, the term metadata has

also come to be used to describe data that is associated with the primary video in a datastream. So

embedded audio will (incorrectly) be called metadata when it tells us nothing at all about the pictures.

Oh well.

Multi-mode

Multi-mode fibers have a larger diameter core than single mode fibers (either 50 or 62.5 microns

compared to 9 microns), and a correspondingly larger aperture. It is much easier to couple light energy

into a multi-mode fiber, but internal reflections will cause multiple “modes” of the signal to propagate

down the fiber. This will degrade the ability of the fiber to be used over long distances.

See also Single Mode.

NTSC

The color television encoding system used in North America was originally defined by the National

Television Standards Committee. This American standard has also been adopted by Canada, Mexico,

Japan, Korea, and Taiwan. (This standard is referred to disparagingly as Never Twice Same Color.)

Optical

An optical interface between two devices carries data by modulating a light source. This light source

is typically a laser or laser diode (similar to an LED) which is turned on and off at the bitrate of the

datastream. The light is carried from one device to another through a glass fiber. The fiber’s core acts

as a waveguide or lightpipe to carry the light energy from one end to another. Optical transmission

has two very significant advantages over metallic copper cables. Firstly, it does not require that the

two endpoint devices have any electrical connection to each other. This can be very advantageous

in large facilities where problems with ground loops appear. And secondly, and most importantly, an

optical interface can carry a signal for many kilometers or miles without any degradation or loss in the

recovered signal. Copper is barely useful at distances of just 1000 feet.

Advertising