3G2 - The3rd Generation Partnership Project 2 (3GPP2) is a collaboration between telecommunications associations to make a globally applicable third generation 3G mobile phone system specification within the scope of the ITU's IMT-2000 project. In practice, 3GPP2 is the standardization group for CDMA2000, the set of 3G standards based on earlier 2G CDMA technology.
3GP,3GPP-
The mpeg4 based video format used in mobile terminals, like
cell phones.
4:3 standard - The 4:3 ratio (generally named as: "Four-Three", "Four-by-Three" or "Four-to-Three") for standard television has been in use since television's origins and many computer monitors use the same aspect ratio. 4:3 is the aspect ratio defined by the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences as a standard after the advent of optical sound-on-film. By having TV match this aspect ratio, films previously photographed on film could be satisfactorily viewed on TV in the early days of the medium (i.e. the 1940s and the 1950s). When cinema attendance dropped, Hollywood created widescreen aspect ratios (such as the 1.85:1 ratio mentioned earlier) in order to differentiate their industry from the TV.
16:9 standard - 16:9 (generally named as: "Sixteen-Nine", "Sixteen-by-Nine" or "Sixteen-to-Nine") is the international standard format of HDTV as used in Australia, Canada, Japan, South Korea, and the United States, as well as in Europe on HDTV and non-HD widescreen television (EDTV) PALplus.
AAC - Stands for Advanced Audio Coder, is a standardized, lossy compression and encoding scheme for digital audio. Designed to be the successor of the MP3 format it has better sound quality and smaller size than MP3. Many mobile devices support AAC format like SonyEricsson's W890i, Sony's Walkman, Apple's iPhone, Nokia, Motorola, Samsung, BenQ-Siemens and Philips, BlackBerry, Nintendo's Wii, Creative Zen Portable, Microsoft Zune, (PSP) with firmware 2.0 or greater. An audio-encoding standard for MPEG-2 that is not backward, compatible with MPEG-1 audio.
AC3 - (Dolby Digital ac-3) is the common version containing up
to six discrete channels of sound, with five
channels for normal-range speakers (20 Hz – 20,000 Hz)
(right front, center, left front, right rear and left rear)
and one channel (20 Hz – 120 Hz) for the subwoofer
driven low-frequency effects like explosion and hammerblow.
Batman Returns was the first film to use Dolby Digital
technology.
APE - (monkey's audio) A file with the extension .ape, is an
audio file compressed using Monkey's Audio. Monkey's Audio
is a lossless compression, which means it does not
permanently discard data during compression. It achieves
compression rates of around 40%. Since it is lossless, the
quality of the audio after compression will be the exact
same. And we can only convert the
CD and uncompressed WAV to APE
for the moment, MP3 is not available. Officially, Monkey's
Audio is
only available for the Microsoft Windows platform.
ASF - Stands for Advanced Streaming Format. Stores audio and
video information and it is specially designed to run on
networks like the Internet. ASF is a highly flexible and
compressed format that contains streaming audio, video,
slide shows, and synchronized events. When you use ASF
files, content is delivered to you as a continuous flow of
data. When an AVI file is compressed and converted to an ASF
file, the file begins playing after only a few seconds.
Aspect Ratio - The aspect ratio of an image is its width divided by its height. Aspect ratios are mathematically expressed as x :y (pronounced "x-to-y") and x×y (pronounced "x-by-y"). The most common aspect ratios used today in the presentation of films in movie theaters are 1.85:1 and 2.39:1. Two common videographic aspect ratios are 4:3 (1.33:1), universal for standard-definition video formats, and 16:9 (1.78:1), universal to high-definition television and European digital television. Other cinema and video aspect ratios exist, but are used infrequently. In still camera photography, the most common aspect ratios are 4:3 and 3:2, though other aspect ratios, such as 5:4, 7:5, and 1:1 (square format), are used.
AVI - Stands for Audio Video Interleaved, storing sound and
moving pictures in RIFF format developed by Microsoft. An
AVI file can use different codec and formats so there is no
set format for an AVI file unlike for example standard VCD
video which sets a standard for resolution, bitrates, and
codec used.
Bit Rate - Bitrate or Bit rate is the average number of bits that one
second of video or audio data will consume. Higher bitrate
means bigger file size and generally better video or audio
quality while lower bitrate means lower file size but worse
video or audio quality. Some bitrate examples in common
video and audio files:
MP3 about 128 kbps (kilobits per second)
VCD about 1374 kbps
DVD about 4500 kbps
DV about 25 Mbps (megabits per second)
Codec - A codec is a device or program capable of performing
encoding and decoding on a digital data stream or signal.
The word codec may be a combination of any of the following:
'Compressor-Decompressor', 'Coder-Decoder', or
'Compression/Decompression algorithm'.
Deinterlacing - Deinterlacing is the process of converting interlaced video, like common analog television signals, into a non-interlaced form.
Encoder - An encoder is a device used to change a signal (such as a
bitstream) or data into a code. The code may serve any of a
number of purposes such as compressing information for
transmission or storage, encrypting or adding redundancies
to the input code, or translating from one code to another.
FLV - SWF is not the only Flash format.
FLV
files (Flash Video Files) are a binary file format that
delivers "bitmapped" video, limited to one video and one
audio stream per file, over the Internet to the Macromedia
Flash Player version 7. FLV content may also be associated
with SWF files by ActionScript external references. FLV
format can also be imported into Macromedia Flash Authoring
tool. Unlike SWF format, FLV do not have maximum of 16000
frames limitation and ideally for large video file size.
Frame Rate - Frames per second. A measure of the rate at which pictures
are shown for a motion video image. In NTSC and PAL video,
each frame is made up of two interlaced fields.
H.264 - H.264 is known as MPEG4 AVC. The standard is expected to
offer up to twice the compression of the current MPEG4 ASP
(Advanced Simple Profile), in addition to improvements in
perceptual quality. The H.264 standard can provide
DVD-quality video at less than 1 Mbps, and is considered
promising for full-motion video over wireless, satellite,
and ADSL Internet connections.
High
Definition - High
Definition generally refers to the resolution of digital
video, with resolutions of 1280x720 and 1920x1080 being the
most common resolutions referred to as High Definition.
IFO - IFO is a DVD information file that stores information about Chapters, Subtitles and Audio Tracks. An IFO file is one of three types of files that are used on DVDs. It contains important navigational information, such as where a video chapter begins, and where audio and subtitle streams exist within the movie (VOB) file. IFO files are not encrypted.
ISO - An ISO image is an archive file (a.k.a. disk image) of an optical disc using a conventional ISO (International Organization for Standardization ) format that is supported by many software vendors. ISO image files typically have a file extension of .ISO but Mac OS X ISO images often have the extension ".CDR". The name "ISO" is taken from the ISO 9660 file system used with CD-ROM media but the term ISO image can refer to any optical disc image, even a UDF image.
Letterbox - Letterboxing is the practice of transferring widescreen film to video formats while preserving the film's original aspect ratio. On video displays with a 4:3 aspect ratio, the resulting videographic image has mattes (black bars) above and below it. LTBX is the identifying acronym for films and images so formatted. Letterboxing was developed for use in 4:3 television displays when widescreen television was in its technological infancy. Any Academy ratio (1.33:1) film will appear stretched and distorted to fill the widescreen television display, which is avoided by pillar boxing the image either via the television set or the DVD player. Occasionally, an image broadcast at 4:3 appears letterboxed on a 4:3, 16:9, or wider aspect ratio television screen. This effect is common on personal video websites and old documentaries.
M4A - The audio file format used by Apple in their popular
iTunes Music Store often appears on your system with the
".M4A" filename extension. M4A can produce better audio
quality than MP3 using less physical space for the files.
M4V - M4V is a standard file format for the popular Apple iPod devices.
MKV - The MKV format (Matroska Video) is an entirely free video format. More precisely, it is a container (hence the name Matroska, in reference to the Russian dolls contained within another) making it possible to contain video (DivX, Xvid, RV9, etc), sound (MP3, MP2, AC3, Ogg, AAC, DTS, PCM), as well as subtitles (SRT, ASS, SSA, USF, etc) in the same file.
MOV - QuickTime Content (.mov, .qt) a file format developed by
Apple Computer to create, edit, publish, and view multimedia
files. QuickTime supports video, animation, graphics, 3D and
virtual reality (VR).
MP3 - is an acronym for MPEG-1 (or MPEG-2) Layer 3 audio
encoding (it is not an acronym for MPEG-3). MP3 is a popular
compression format used for audio files on computers and
portable devices.
MP4 - is a new container format, a container format allows you
to combine different multimedia streams into one single
file. Multimedia containers are for example the well known
AVI, MPEG, Matroska, OGM. MP4 is the global file extension
for the official container format defined in the MPEG-4
standard. MP4 is streamable and supports all kinds of
multimedia content, multiple audio-, video-, subtitle
streams, pictures, variable-frame rates, -bitrates, -samplerates...)
and advanced content like 2D and 3D animated graphics, user
interactivity, DVD-like menus.
MPEG - An ISO/ITU standard for compressing video offering lossy
compression technique (some data of the original image is
lost during the compression).
MPG - MPEG-1 or MPEG-2 encoded video file.
NTSC - Abbreviation of National Television Standards Committee.
The NTSC is responsible for setting television and video
standards in the United States (in Europe and other parts of
the world, the dominant television standards are PAL and
SECAM). The NTSC standard for television defines a composite
video signal with a refresh rate of 60 fields (half-frames
interlaced) per second. Each frame contains 525 lines and
can contain 16 million different colors. The resolution of
an NTSC VCD is 352x240 pixels, an NTSC SVCD is 480x480, and
an NTSC full D1 DVD is 704 or 720 x 480.
OGG - OGG Theora is the video compression codec part of the ogg
multimedia project. It is based on On2's VP3 codec, but On2
has released it now under a BSD type license and renounced
its patents, so it is now free and open source. A final
release is due out in early summer 2003. Ogg is the name of an open source multimedia project
maintained by the xiph.org foundation. OGG Vorbis refers to
the lessee general purpose audio compression format that
surpasses mp3 in quality and rivals new formats such as AAC
and TwinVQ (a.k.a. VQF).
PAL - Short for Phase Alternating Line, the dominant television standard in Europe. The United States uses a different standard, NTSC. PAL delivers 625 lines at 50 fields (half-frames interlaced) per second. The resolution of a PAL VCD is 352x288 pixels, a PAL SVCD is 480x576, and a PAL full D1 DVD is 704 or 720 x 576.
Pan & Scan - Pan & Scan is one method of adjusting widescreen film images so that they can be shown within the proportions of a standard definition 4:3 aspect ratio television screen, often cropping off the sides of the original widescreen image to focus on the composition's most important aspects.
VOB - All DVD movies are stored in on a DVD video disc in
so-called VOB files. VOB files usually contain multiplexed
Dolby Digital audio and MPEG-2 video. VOB files on a DVD are
numbered as follows: vts_XX_y.vob where XX represents the
title and Y the part of the title. There can be 99 titles
and 10 parts, although vts_XX_0.vob does not contain any
video, usually just menu or navigational information. You
can find them on a DVD video disc in a subdirectory labeled
VIDEO_TS (all upper case).
WAV - (WAVE), short for Waveform audio format, is a Microsoft
and IBM audio file format standard for storing audio on PCs.
It is the main format
used on
Windows systems for raw audio.
The most common WAV format contains uncompressed audio and
uncompressed WAV files are quite large in size,
so,
it has declined in popularity. WAV
files are probably the simplest of the common formats for
storing audio samples. Unlike MPEG audio and other compressed formats, WAVs store samples "in the
raw" where no pre-processing is required other that
formatting of the data. The WAV file itself consists of
three "chunks" of information: The RIFF chunk which
identifies the file as a WAV file, The FORMAT chunk which
identifies parameters such as sample rate and the DATA chunk
which contains the actual data (samples).
WMA - (Windows
Media Audio) is an audio data compression technology
developed by Microsoft. It can be played by Windows Media
player, RealPlayer, Winamp, Windows Movie Maker, and the
Microsoft Zune media management software supports most WMA
codec.
Its audio quality is better than mp3 when the bitstream is
below 128kbps, but won't get much improvement when the
bitstream gets higher.
WMV - Windows Media file with Audio and/or Video (WMV): You can
use a WMV file either to download and play files or to
stream content. The WMV file format is similar to the ASF
file format.
XviD - is an ISO MPEG-4 compliant video codec. It's not a product
but an open source project which is developed and maintained
by people around the world. |