Digital video compression/decompression algorithms (codecs) are at the heart of many modern video products, from DVD players to multimedia jukeboxes to video-capable ...
Compression is one of the most important criteria in determining quality and cost of ownership in a digital video system. Advances in processing power enable more sophisticated compression techniques.
Video compression has become an essential technology to meet the burgeoning demand for high‐resolution content while maintaining manageable file sizes and transmission speeds. Recent advances in ...
With more consumers choosing to upgrade their viewing experience by switching to 4K TVs and compatible streaming devices, there’s a growing demand for high quality 4K video content. High resolution 4K ...
Hype has quickly been building around wireless video for the past few years. With 2.5G and 3G systems on the way, many have started to view the delivery of video content to mobile phones as one of the ...
In the third part of our four part series on video processing and standards conversion, Phil Rhodes explains why frame rate conversions and temporal remapping is such arduous tasks. In the previous ...
The discrete cosine transform (DCT) remains a cornerstone of modern image and video compression techniques, enabling the decomposition of visual data into frequency components that can be efficiently ...
Learn about the impact of compression methods (MJPEG, MPEG-4, H.264) on storage, bandwidth in video surveillance, and the shift from VCRs to DVRs and NVRs for efficient storage solutions. Digital ...
A visual information source requires a transmission or storage medium to convey its message to the observer. The fidelity of transmission and reproduction of the message is closely related to and ...