
Please
select a letter for terms starting with that letter:
A
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-
C -
C
An acronym for Chrominance (in video signals).
C
And C++
Computer programming languages. An effective language
used by high-level programmers for general purposes,
including complex interactive programs.
Cable
Electrical conductors such as wires and cords used to
power or link various pieces of equipment.
Cable
Equalization
The method of altering the frequency response of a video
amplifier to compensate for high frequency losses in
cables that it feeds. (See Peaking.)
Cache
A reserved section of memory used to improve performance
or a temporary storage location for data requiring immediate
access. A small amount of relatively high-speed storage
which is used as an intermediary between the data user
and a larger, slower storage device (the backing store).
CAD
An acronym for Computer Aided Design.
CAD/CAM
Acronym for Computer-Aided Design and Computer-Aided
Manufacture. Software that allows users to graphically
create system models, then manipulate and study the
system models against predetermined criteria.
CAE
An acronym for Computer-Aided Engineering.
Capacitance
The storing of an electrical charge. At high frequencies,
capacitance that exists in cables also represents a
form of impedance (load or resistance).
Card
A computer board with printed circuitry and components
that is plugged into a computer's system board to provide
special functions or features.
Carrier
A term used to refer to various telephone companies
that provide local, long distance or value added services;
alternately, a system or systems whereby many channels
of electrical information can be carried over a single
transmission path.
Cathode-ray
Tube (CRT)
A vacuum tube that produces an image when energized
by an electron beam generated inside the tube. A CRT
has a heater element, cathode, and grids in the neck
of the tube, making up the "gun". An electron
beam is produced by the gun and is accelerated toward
the front display, or screen surface of the tube. The
display surface contains phosphors that illuminate when
bombarded by electrons in the electron beam. A CRT is
commonly known as a picture tube.
CAV
An acronym for Component Analog Video or Constant Angular
Velocity.
CBT
An acronym for Computer-Based Training.
CCD
An acronym for Charge-Coupled Device.
CCIR
An acronym for International Radio Consultative Committee.
A global organization responsible for establishing television
standards.
CCITT
An acronym for Consultative Committee for international
Telegraphy and Telephony (now called the International
Telecommunications Union's Telecommunications Standardization
Sector or TSS), an international body responsible for
establishing interoperability standards for communications
systems. The CCITT is the world's leading telecommunications
standards organization.
CD
An acronym for Compact Disc. (See CD-ROM.)
CD+G
An acronym for Compact Disc + Graphics. A CD format
that includes the ability to utilize extended graphics
as written into the original CD-ROM
specifications.
CD-I
An acronym for Compact Disc-Interactive.
CD-ROM
An acronym for Compact Disc - Read Only Memory. A 4.75
inch laser-encoded optical memory storage medium with
the same constant linear velocity (CLV)
format as compact audio discs and some video discs.
CD-ROMs can hold up to 650 megabytes of information.
CD-ROM
XA
An acronym for Compact Disc-Read Only Memory Extended
Architecture. An extension of the CD-ROM
standard billed as a hybrid of CD-ROM
and CD-I, and promoted by Microsoft.
The extension adds ADPCM audio to permit the interleaving
of sound and video data to animation, with sound synchronization.
CD-WORM
An acronym for Compact Disc - Write Once/Read Many.
A format similar to CD-ROM that
can be written to once and ready from many times.
Central
Processing Unit (CPU)
A part of a computer system which contains the main
storage, arithmetic unit, and special register groups.
Performs arithmetic operations, controls instruction
processing, and provides timing signals and other operations.
CGA
An acronym for Color Graphics Adapter.
Channel
One of the two stereo sound signals, identified as left
and right, in audio systems and video and audio discs.
A high-speed optical fiber or metal pathway between
the host computer and the controllers of the peripheral
devices.
Chapter
One independent, self-contained segment of an interactive
Level I videodisc. Chapter numbers identify individual
chapters by searching to a chapter stop.
Charge-Coupled
Device (CCD)
Charge-coupled devices are typically used in digital
cameras as an optical scanning mechanism. A CCD device
consists of a shift register that stores samples of
analog signals. An analog charge is sequentially passed
along the device by the action of stepping voltages
and stored in potential wells formed under electrodes.
The charge is moved from one well to another by the
stepping voltages.
Check
Disc
A videodisc or CD-ROM produced
before quantity replication to verify the accuracy of
the design, content and coding.
Check
Sum
A summation of digits, or bits, computed for the purpose
of verifying the integrity of a block of data. For example,
a check sum is computed on a block of data and sent
with the data. At its destination, a new Check Sum in
computed (using the same formula) and compared against
the original Check Sum. If they don't agree, there is
a data error.
Chroma
The color information on a video signal as opposed to
the brightness (intensity). The characteristics of color
information, independent of luminance intensity. Hue
and saturation are qualities of chroma. Black, gray,
and white objects do not have chroma characteristics.
Chrominance
Part of a color television signal containing the color
information. Abbreviated by "C".
Chrominance-to-Burst
Phase
The difference between the expected phase and the actual
phase of the chrominance portion of the video signal
relative to burst phase.
Chrominance-to-Luminance
Delay
The difference in time that it takes for the chrominance
portion of the video signal to pass through a system
relative to the time it takes for the luminance portion.
Also called relative chroma time.
Chrominance-to-Luminance
Gain
The difference between the gain of the chrominance portion
of the video signal and the gain of the luminance portion
as they pass through a system.
Commission
Internationale de l'Eclairage (CIE or The International
Commission on Illumination)
The organization responsible for the chroma diagram
of 1939. A measurement format for describing color.
Of the two standards (1931 & 1976), IFS uses the
1931 scale. A three dimensional diagram that defines
light and color. Other systems have been developed by
CIE more recently.
CIF
An acronym for Common Intermediate Format.
Clipping
The process of shearing off the peaks (or excursions)
of a signal.
CLV
An acronym for Constant Linear Velocity.
Coaxial
Cable
A two-conductor wire in which one conductor completely
wraps the other with the two separated by insulation.
Constant impedance transmission cable.
Code
A formula or method used to represent information. To
write a computer program.
Codec
Coder/decoder system for digital transmission.
Collimated
Refers to a light path segment where all the light rays
are parallel to each other.
Color
Bar
A test pattern containing six basic colors; yellow,
cyan, green, magenta, red, and blue - used to check
the chrominance functions of color TV systems.
Color
Bust
In color systems, a burst of sub-carrier frequency located
on the back porch of the composite video signal. This
serves as a color synchronizing signal to establish
a frequency and phase reference for the chrominance
signal.
Color
Contrast
Refers to the value relationship of two colors used
in conjunction within a presentation slide, e.g., yellow
letters on a blue background. Contrast is required for
readability of text, charts and graphs. The more contrast,
the better the readability.
Color
Graphics Adapter (CGA)
Introduced in 1983, it was IBM's first product to display
both color and graphics standard at 320 x 200 - 640
x 200. An RCA jack above the 9-pin video output connector
provides NTSC video. Signal type
is TTL, non-interlaced, with pixel x line resolution
of 640 x 200 and a color palette of 4/16. CGA has a
horizontal scan frequency of 15.75 kHz and vertical
frequency of 60Hz.
Color
Mapping
A method of translating many video display monitor colors
into fewer LCD projection panel colors.
Color
Palette
The total number of colors possible. See Gray Scale.
Color
Phase (Hue)
The correct timing relationship within a color display.
Color is considered to be in phase when the hue is reproduced
correctly.
Color
Resolution
The number of colors available at once in an image,
measured in terms of bits per pixel.
Color
Stripe
LCD, TFT, or STN with RGB
sub-pixels making additive color using tiny red, green,
and blue windows in front of each sub-pixel.
Color
Sub-Carrier
A 3.58 MHz signal interwoven with a standard NTSC
monochrome signal that contains color information.
Color
Red, Green, Blue & Composite Sync Outputs
Provides analog red, green, blue level. 7 volt P-P video
output signals and negative-going 4 volts P-P non-terminated.
and 2.3 volts P-P terminated TTL level composite sync
output, matching the input standards of most data monitors
and projectors. On the RGB-120 and RGB-202xi interfaces,
sync is automatically stripped from any input computer
signal that has sync included on the green channel.
With sync on the green channel, some large screen data
monitors and projectors may display a greenish tint,
as well as a pulling to the right at the top or bottom.
Stripping sync from the green video and using the separate
sync output on those interfaces solves these problems.
Sync can be added to the green channel by setting the
"Sync On Green" switch.
Comb Filter
So called because of the shape of its frequency response,
the Comb Filter provides a better method of separating
Y and C than a chroma bandpass filter or chroma trap.
There is produces better quality video with less crawling
or "zipper" artifacts.
Common
Intermediate Format
An international standard for video display formats
developed by TSS. The QCIF format, which employs half
the CIF spatial resolution in both horizontal and vertical
directions, is the mandatory H.261 format. QCIF is used
for most desktop videoconferencing applications where
head and shoulder pictures are sent from desk to desk.
QCIF displays 176 pixels grouped in 144 non-interlaced
luminance lines.
Compact
Disc (CD)
Also referred to as compact audio disc. A 4.75 inch
optical disk that contains information encoded digitally
in the CLV format.
Compact
Disc-Interactive
A format that provides audio, digital data, still graphics
and limited motion video. A compact disc format that
stores audio, still graphics, digital data and limited
motion video that can be controlled or accessed by a
special computer code.
Compatible
Term used to describe different hardware devices or software
formats that can be utilized together without modification.
Component
Analog Video
Component video signals in which an analog voltage or
current (rather than a set of numbers) represents the
value of a pixel. Encoded video signals which can provide
greater color resolution than composite video. NTSC
encoder must be used to convert the signals. The Videodisc
rotates at a constant speed, regardless of the position
of the reading head. CAV format discs allow each frame
(of 54,000) to be addressed individually. CAV discs
revolve continuously at 1800 rpm (NTSC)
AND 1500 RPM (PAL), one revolution
per frame. Program time is 30 minutes per side on a
12-inch disc, 14 minutes per side on a 8-inch disc.
Component video signals in which an analog voltage or
current (rather than a set of numbers) represents the
value of the pixel, the same as "analog components."
Component
Video
A color television system starts with three channels
of information; Red, Green, & Blue (RGB).
In the process of translating these channels to a single
composite video signal they are often first converted
to Y, R-Y, and B-Y. Both 3-channel systems, RGB
and Y, R-Y, B-Y are component video signals. They are
the components that eventually make up the composite
video signal. Much higher program production quality
is possible if the elements are assembled in the component
domain.
Composite
Sync
A signal consisting of horizontal sync pulses, vertical
sync pulses, and equalizing pulses with no signal reference
level.
Composite
Video
A mixed signal comprised of the luminance black and
white, chrominance (color), blanking pulses, sync pulses
and color burst. Combines the synchronization (horizontal
& vertical) as well as the chrominance & luminance
onto a single wire.
Compression
The process of reducing the information content of a
signal so that it occupies less space on a transmission
channel or storage device and a fundamental concept
of video communications. An uncompressed NTSC
signal requires about 90 Mbps of throughput, greatly
exceeding the speed of all but the fastest and shortest
of today's networks. Squeezing the video information
can be accomplished by reducing the quality (sending
fewer frames in a second or displaying the information
in a smaller window) or by eliminating redundancy.
Computer-Aided
Design (CAD)
The use of the computer system for graphic design.
Computer Graphics
Visual images produced by a computer. Graphics standards
for IBM-compatible PCs include CGA, EGA, VGA, SVGA, XGA,
SXGA and UXGA.
Computer-Based
Training (CBT)
The use of a computer to facilitate training and/or
instruction. Also known as computer-aided (or assisted)
instruction (CAI).
Computer-Video
Interface
A device which converts the "nonstandard"
video output of computer systems to a "standard"
RGB analog signal that can then be
connected to a compatible data monitor or projector.
Constant
Angular Velocity
The Videodisc rotates at a constant speed, regardless
of the position of the reading head. CAV format discs
allow each frame (of 54,000) to be addressed individually.
CAV discs revolve continuously at 1800 RPM (NTSC)
and 1500 RPM (PAL), one revolution
per frame. Program time is 30 minutes per side on a
12-inch disc, 14 minutes per side on a 8-inch disc.
Component video signals in which an analog voltage or
current (rather than a set of numbers) represents the
value of the pixel, the same as analog components.
Constant
Linear Velocity
Videodisc format that allows twice as much play time
(up to one hour) per side as the CAV format, but without
many of the user-control capabilities. The CLV disc
can be read in linear play only but can provide search
by chapter. CLV discs range in speed from 1800 RPM at
the center track to 600 RPM at the outer edge. Playing
time is 60 minutes per side on a 12-inch disc or 20
minutes per side on an 8-inch disc.
Contrast
The range of light and dark values in a picture or the
ratio between the maximum and the minimum brightness
values. Low contrast is shown mainly as shades of gray,
white high contrast is shown as blacks and whites with
very little gray. It is also a TV monitor adjustment
which increases or decreases the level of contrast of
a televised picture.
Contrast
Ratio
The ratio of the maximum white to the minimum black
level possible for a particular spot on the image with
the background light levels factored out. This is the
ratio of the highlight output level divided by the low
light output level. In theory, the contrast ratio of
the television system should be at least 100:1, if not
300:1. There are several limitations. In the CRT,
light from adjacent elements contaminates the area of
each element. Room ambient light contaminates light
emitted from the CRT. Well-controlled
viewing conditions should yield a practical contrast
ratio of 30:1 to 50:1.
Controller
A specialized computer or processor that controls the
transfer of information between a computer and one or
more memory devices. The controller is the circuitry
that finds, analyzes, and executes the instructions
in a computer program.
Convergence
The alignment of the Red, Green and Blue video on a
projected display.
Coupling
The method of connecting two circuits together. Circuits
connected with a wire are directly coupled; circuits
connected through a capacitor or a transformer are indirectly
(or AC) coupled.
Courseware
Instructional software and support materials needed
to deliver a course or instructions module.
CPS
An acronym for Characters Per Second.
CPU
An acronym for Central Processing Unit.
Crosshatch
A test pattern consisting of vertical and horizontal
lines used for converging a color display device.
CRT
An acronym for Cathode Ray Tube.
CSMA/CD
Carrier Sense Media Access/Collision Detection. The
Network Layer protocol used on most LANs.
Cursor
An indicator on a display that marks the current active
position. A symbol (usually a cross-hair, horizontal
bar or vertical bar) indicates where characters or the
drawing will next appear on the screen.
Cut-And-Paste
A method of moving a portion of a document (text and/or
graphics) into another document or another location
with the same document.
CYMK
Cyan, Yellow, Magenta and Black - See Subtractive Color.
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