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D -
Data
Compatibility
Relates to the video and computer signal formats the
projector is capable of displaying.
Dimensions
The physical size, length, width, and height of a projector,
as measured in inches.
Display
Technology
The type of technology used to produce bright, clear
images in high resolution. Many projectors use many
different display technologies such as Digital Light
Processing™ and Liquid Crystal Displays (LCDs)
combined with high-brightness lamps and precision optics.
DLP™
Acronym for Digital Light Processing™; a
data projection technology developed by Texas Instruments
using a microprocessor to display bright, colorful images
in fully lit rooms. Used primarily in portable and ultra-portable
projectors, the DLP™ chip is the size of
a postage stamp and contains millions of microscopic
mirrors — one for each pixel — that flip on an axis,
reflecting light through a color wheel to create your
image.
DA
Acronym for Distribution Amplifier.
D/A
Acronym for Digital to Analog.
DAC
Acronym for Digital to Analog Converter.
DAT
Acronym for Digital Audio Tape.
Data
(1) A representation of facts, concepts, or instructions
in a formalized manner suitable for communication, interpretation,
or processing by human or automatic means. (2) Any representations,
such as characters or analog quantities, to which meaning
is, or may be assigned.
Data
Compression
Reducing the size of a data file by reducing unnecessary
information, such as blanks and repeating or redundant
characters or patterns.
Data
Monitor
A monitor with horizontal scan capability between 15.75
- 36 (42) kHz. Data monitors and projectors are commonly
associated with NTSC video. IBM
CGA through VGA and Apple/Macintosh computer input sources.
Data
Rate
The rate or speed at which data is transmitted.
db
Acronym for Decibel.
dBA
Sound level measurement unit corrected for average human
hearing response.
DBS
Acronym for Direct broadcast satellite.
D-channel
In an ISDN network the D-channel is a signaling channel
over which the carrier passes packet-switched information.
The D-channel can also support the transmission of low-speed
data or telemetry sent by the subscriber.
DC
Acronym for Direct Current.
DC
Coupling
A mode that passes both AC and DC
signal components to the circuit.
D
Connector
A connector with rounded corners and angles ends, taking
on the shape of the letter "D". Commonly used
in computers and video.
DC
Restoration
The correct blanking level for a video signal is zero
volts. When a video signal is AC-coupled
between stages, it loses its DC reference.
A DC Restoration circuit clamps the
blanking at a fixed level. If set properly, this level
is zero volts.
DDC
Acronym for Display Data Channel.
Debug
To locate and correct any errors in a multimedia program.
Decibel
The standard unit used to express gain or loss of power.
It indicates the logarithmic ratio of output power divided
by input power. A power loss of 3 dB is an attenuation
of half of the original value. The term "3dB down"
is used to describe the "half power point".
Delivery
System
The computer and media hardware components used to deliver
a multimedia or interactive video program. Delivery
systems range from a videodisc player with an on-board
microprocessor, a monitor and a keypad to a personal
computer, more than one monitor and a variety of peripheral
devices such as a mouse, printer, a CD-ROM, and so on.
Depth
Of Focus
A measure of an imaging system to keep an image in focus
when the object plane is NOT thin.
Device
Driver
Software that allows the computer to communicate with
a peripheral device, such as a printer, a videodisc
player, and/or a CD-ROM player.
Decoder
A device used to separate the RGBS (Red, Green, Blue
and Sync) signals from a composite video signal (90
IQ).
- A television
set-top device, which enables the home subscriber
to convert an electronically scrambled television,
picture into a viewable signal. This should not be
confused with a digital coder/decoder known as a CODEC,
which is used in conjunction with digital transmissions.
- A device that
converts composite video to separate Red, Green and
Blue Video. Doing this eliminates chroma "crawl"
that is associated with NTSC
video because RGB are combined
on one channel. Manufacturers of video decoders include
Extron,
Faroudja
and Snell
and Wilcox.
Delay
The time it takes for a signal to go from the sending
station through the videoconference to the receiving
station. This transmission delay for a single hop videoconference
connection is very close on one-quarter of a second.
Demodulator
A device which operates on a carrier wave to recover
the wave with which the carrier was originally modulated.
Desktop
Publishing
The use of a personal computer as a production system
for generating typeset-quality text and graphics.
Differential
Audio
See Balanced Audio.
Differential
Gain
Variation in the gain of the chrominance
signal as the luminance signal on which it rides
is varied from blanking to white level.
Differential
Phase
Variation in the phase of the chrominance subcarrier
as the luminance signal on which it rides is varied
from blanking to white level.
Digital
A method in which signals are represented by a set of
discrete numerical values as opposed to continuously
fluctuating current or voltage.
Digital
Audio Tape
A method of recording digital audio information on tape
at a high density and high quality. The method uses
a rotating head, similar to that used in video tape
recording.
Digital
Satellite System
A digital DBS system developed by Hughes and
Thompson and first marketed by RCA; the DSS initials
are no longer used, and the system is now known as the
DirecTVSatellite System.
Digital
Signal
Digital signals have two levels, high/low or on/off.
AKA;TTL.
Digital
Television
fDigital Television. In general, a broadcast TV system
in which
Digital-to-Analog
Converter
A computing device that changes digital quantities into
into a voltage or current whose magnitude is proportional
to the numeric value of the digital signal.
Digital
Video
Video where all the instructions for the images are
in computer data form, i.e., bits. A method in which
signals are represented by a set of discrete numerical
values, as opposed to continuously fluctuating current
or voltage.
Digitization
The transformation of an analog signal into digital
information.
Digitize
To convert analog information into digital information,
to record a visual image or real object in a format
that can be processed by a computer.
Digitizers
Video digitizers utilize video cameras to take pictures
of photographs or live and still action. The information
is decoded into RIB (digital form)
and stored in the frame buffet.
DIP
Acronym for Dual In-Line Package.
DIP
Switches
Tiny switches that are used to change settings on printers,
computers, interfaces, switchers, modems, etc. They
are designed to fit in a DIP space on a circuit board.
Direct
broadcast satellite
A system in which signals from a satelliteare received
by home viewers directly, as opposed to systems that
distribute signals only to cable-TV "head ends,"
which then distribute them to their customers. DBS can
apply to satellite-distributed pager signals as well
as to audio and video.
Direct
Current
A signal with a constant voltage and current.
Disk
Drive
A storage unit (devloped by Xerox) used by a computer
made up of disks with a magnetic coating.
Distance
Learning
The incorporation of video and audio technologies into
the educational process so that students can attend
classes and training sessions in a location distant
from that where the course is being presented. Distance
learning systems are usually interactive and are becoming
a highly-valuable tool in the delivery of training and
education to widely-dispersed students in remote locations
or in instances where the instructor cannot travel to
the student's site. Manufacturers of Distance Learning
systems include: AMX,
Crestron,
PictureTel, V-Tel
and Tandberg.
Distribution
Amplifier
A device that allows connection of one input source
to multiple output sources such as monitors or projectors.
Disk
Operating System
A computer operating environment designed to use a disk.
Languages, applications and utility programs can be
transmitted quickly between the disk storage system
and CPU memory. DOS stands for both the Microsoft
Disk Operating System (MS-DOS) and IBM's Personal Computer
Disk Operating System (PC-DOS).
Display
A screen that electronically presents characters, numbers,
graphics or other information transmitted from the personal
computer. To show text and graphics on a monitor.
Display
Color
There are two primary concerns which are related to
color temperature: 1)The color temperature of the lamps
and fixtures in the display environment - which we now
understand, and 2)The color temperature of the display
device itself. Adding certain amounts of a specific
color of red, green and blue together creates television
images. In order to reproduce the subtle nuances of
the image, these quantities and colors need to be duplicated.
Therefore, the red, green, and blue light that the display
makes, should be as close as possible to the reference
set forth by the television standards. The white point
of the display (or the starting point at which we produce
color) must be set to the white point of the signal
(also set forth by the television standards). The white
point is the color produced when equal amounts of red,
green, and blue signals are applied. If this is not
set properly, the image will be "colored"
or skewed by the difference in the signal's white point,
and the display's white point. Different television
standards, and computer displays, all have a different
area within this color space that they can display.
This also means that, as depicted in the CIE chart,
display devices can be set to different color temperatures.
In the display world, bluer whites look cleaner and
better than yellow whites. So while bluer whites may
not be as accurate, many display devices are set to
a bluer color temperature so that they can create more
pleasing pictures. Other displays are set to more accurately
render color. What has emerged are four color temperature
standards for display devices.
The following are the established color temperature
standards for display:
- Computer standard
(IEEE): 5400K
- Film: 5400K. 5400K
displays a subjectively better image and is warmer.
It is also more accurate, but less bright than the
9300K. Computer monitors are now being shipped at
5400K, and the HDTV standards groups established
it for its reference.
- Video (SMPTE): 6500K.
6500K was selected because it produced colors reasonably
accurately.
- Consumer TV: Moved
from 9300 to 12,000K (bluish). Blue draws the eye,
and we perceive the image as crisper, sharper, and
brighter.
Each color temperature standard
produces color differently, making it virtually impossible
to exactly match displays of different color temperature
standards. The color temperature of a display device is
determined by both user adjustments, and the phosphors
used on the face of the CRT. The phosphor chromaticity
produced by screen phosphors is strictly controlled, enabling
different monitors to produce colors in the same way.
The two most common standards for phosphors are the SMPTE
D65 (6500 degrees Kelvin) used on professional video monitors,
and the P22 standard used on consumer televisions, and
most presentation displays. The SMPTE D65 standard for
color temperature is very close to the average daylight
color temperature. The P22 standard has a color temperature
of 9300 degrees Kelvin that reproduces bluer colors. P22
was chosen because these phosphors are capable of greater
output, producing brighter, more vibrant, pictures in
adverse lighting conditions.
Dissolve
Gradual fading of one image into another, done by changing
the brightness of two superimposed projectors.
Distortion
(Audio)
A modification of the original signal appearing the
output of audio equipment that had not been present
in the input. The most common way of expressing distortion
is in percent of the original signal as Total Harmonic
Distortion (THD).
Distortion
(Geometric)
Pin cushion vs Barrel & Keystoning. A measure of
how well a rectangular object gets projected without
getting the shape changed.
Dithering
Refers to the technique of mixing up either nearby neighboring
pixels (spatial) or consecutive frames (frame) of pixel
information in a random fashion to create the effect
of many intermediate levels between what can be directly
driven. This is the common way in which thousands (even
millions) of colors can be projected.
DLP
(Digital Light Processing )
See DMD.
DMD
(Digital Micromirror Device)
In 1977, it was originally called "Deformable Mirrors
Device". Texas
Instruments has developed DMD microchips used in
DLP (Digital Light Processing ) projector subsystems
that hope to replace the 100-year old CRT
technology. DMD chips use an array of mirrors and memory
cells. A digital image is stored in the memory and then
projected when light is reflected onto the mirrors.
Domain
Name System (DNS)
Network Service to resolve network nodes to IP addresses.
DOS
Acronym for Disk Operating System.
Dot
Clock
(also Pixel Clock) The highest rate that a graphics
device can produce.
Dot
Pitch
The distance between the sets holes or slots (Trinitron
system) for the colors on the adjacent line of a CRT
monitor shadow mask. A smaller the dot pitch allows
for more potential dots to be displayed, thus achieving
better resolution (see Shadow Mask).
Doubler
See Line Doubler.
Double-Supertwist-Nematic
LCD
An system of two STN LCDs stacked
together.
DPT
Acronym for Desktop Publishing.
DRAM
Acronym for Dynamic Read Only Memory
DRAW
Acronym for Direct read after write. Type of optical
disks that can be written to but not erased.
DSS
Acronym for Digital Sattelite System
DSTN
Acronym for Double-Supertwist-Nematic LCD.
DTL
Acronym for Diode Transistor Logic.
DTV
Acronym for Digital Television.
Dual
In-Line Package
A universal method of manufacturing integrated circuits
(ICs) with the pins arranged in two parallel
rows. Dome DIP components are soldered in and some use
DIP sockets.
Duty
Cycle
The duration of any specific signal contained by a multiplexed
signal. Often described as a percentage, e.g., in an
equally weighted multiplexing scheme of 100 signals
into one, the duty cycle would be 1%, meaning a given
pixel is being driven electrically 1% of the time. The
relationship between multiplexing and duty cycle is
inversely proportional - for slow multiplexing rates
the duty cycle is high and for fast rates, the duty
cycle is low. See also "Multiplexing".
DVI
Acronym for Digital Video Interactive. A technology
from Intel Corporation that displays digital graphics
and full-motion video along with real-time compression
and decompression. On a CD-ROM, it provides up to 72
minutes of full-screen video, 2 1/2 hours of half-screen
video, 40,000 medium resolution, or 7,000 high-resolution
images. DVI can compress full-motion video at rates
greater than 100 to 1 and still images at 10 to 1.
DVD
(Digital Video Disc or Digital Versatile Disc) An optical
disc system about the size of a CD ROM, but capable
of storing an entire movie. The technology uses MPEG-2
compression. Typical capacity for these discs is 4.5
GB, or about 133 minutes of digital video.
DVP
Digital Video Processing.
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