Advanced Television System Committee. Group that set the terrestrial transmission and format standards for digital television. Also, the transmitted signals that follow that format.
See " Advanced Television System Committee."
Advanced Television Standards Committee. Formed to establish technical standards for the U.S. digital television system.
Australian Telecommunication Standardization Committee Formerly responsible for managing Australia's input to international and regional telecommunications technical standards. ATSC functions are now performed by the ACIF.
Industry committee formed to develop and recommend the standards for advanced {digital HDTV/SDTV} television in the U.S.
Advanced Television Systems Committee. The official name given to the set of DTV standards.
" dvanced elevision ystems ommittee." Formed to establish technical standards for U.S. advanced television systems.
Advanced Television System Committee (think of it as a modern NTSC). An American committee involved in creating the high definition television standards.
Advanced Television Systems Committee Established the standards of Digital Television and HDTV
Advanced Television Systems Committee Attenuation 06/08/00
Advanced Television Systems Committee. Government-directed committee that developed our digital television transmission system.
Advanced Television Systems Committee. Committee established by the FCC to define new standards for publicly regulated broadcast television in the U.S. Advanced Television Enhancement Forum (ATVEF) A standard for combining intellectual property (IP) data with television video.
Advanced Television Systems Committee. Advanced Television Systems Committee is responsible for establishing and developing digital television standards, as well as all 18 formats of Digital TV.
An acronym for Advanced Television Systems Committee, which is responsible for developing and establishing Digital-HDTV Standards; and the name of the DTV system used by broadcasters in the U.S.
Advanced Television Systems Committee (digital standards committee).
The Advanced Television Systems Committee, Inc. (ATSC), is an international, non-profit membership organization developing voluntary standards for the entire spectrum of advanced television systems. Specifically, ATSC is working to coordinate television standards among different communications media focusing on digital television, interactive systems, and broadband multimedia communications. ATSC is also developing digital television implementation strategies and presenting educational seminars on the ATSC standards.
ATSC - Advanced Television Systems Committee: A committee established by the FCC to define new digital standards for publicly regulated broadcast television in the U.S. This is the format that over-the-air digital TV uses in the USA.
The abbreviation of the Advanced Television Systems Committee, the government-appointed body in charge of defining the standards for the new digital television system.
Abbreviation for Advanced Television Systems Committee. Formed to establish technical standards for advanced television systems, including digital high definition television ( HDTV). http://www.atsc.org
Advanced Television Systems Committee determines voluntary technical standards of acquiring, authoring, distribution and reception of high definition television.
Advanced Television Systems Committee. They defined the SDTV and HDTV standards for the United States, using MPEG 2 for video and Dolby Digital for audio. Other countries are also adopting the ATSC HDTV standard.
an acronym for Advanced Television Systems Committee, and the name of the DTV system used by broadcasters in the U.S. (akin to European COFDM).
Is the name given to the 8-VSB broadcast standard for HDTV in the USA. It is also an abbreviation for the "Advanced Television Systems Committee" that established the standard.
This is the Advanced Television Systems Committee. It sets standards for High Definition TV (HDTV). For DIRECTV customers, this means high definition that comes across by land. The ATSC Web site is www.atsc.org.
Advanced Television Systems Committee. In 1978, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) empaneled the Advisory Committee on Advanced Television Service (ACATS) as an investigatory and advisory committee to develop information that would assist the FCC in establishing an advanced broadcast television (ATV) standard for the United States. This committee created a subcommittee, the ATSC, to explore the need for and to coordinate development of the documentation of Advanced Television Systems. In 1993, the ATSC recommended that efforts be limited to a digital television system (DTV), and in September 1995 issued its recommendation for a Digital Television System standard, which was approved with the exclusion of compression format constraints (picture resolution, frame rate, and frame sequence).
Advanced Television Systems Committee. This group developed the standards for the digital TV broadcasting system used in the United States.
The Advanced Television Systems Committee Inc., is an international, non-profit organization developing voluntary standards for digital television. The ATSC member organizations represent the broadcast, broadcast equipment, motion picture, consumer electronics, computer, cable, satellite, and semiconductor industries. The most common formats are 480p (525 scan lines, 480 of them active, per frame progressive scan, each scan line divided into 640 or 704 parts or pixels, 720p which is 720 active scan lines each with 1280 pixels, and 1080i (1080 active scan lines as two 540 scan line interlaced fields, 1920 pixels on a line).
"Advanced Television Systems Committee." Formed to establish technical standards for U.S. advanced television systems. ATSC is now used as the catch-all nomenclature for DTV broadcast standards.
Stands for the Advanced Television Standards Committee. An advisory group that produced the table of 18 recommended transmission formats for Digital Television (DTV) broadcasting in the United States.
Advanced Television Systems Committee. The group that recommended the new digital television standards to the FCC.
All U.S. digital broadcasts are ATSC signals, which are named after the Advanced Television Systems Committee, a group that formed in 1993 and today offers technical guidelines on how digital television should be broadcast. The ATSC standard supports many different display formats, from standard definition to high definition. (See high definition; compare NTSC.)
Advanced Television Systems Committee. Established by the FCC to define digital TV standards used mainly in the USA.
Advanced Television Systems Committee A committee established by the FCC to decide the technical standards for digital broadcasting in the US.
An organization that establishes voluntary technical standards for advanced television systems, including DTV.
Advanced Television Systems Committee. The ATSC is an international organization of 200 members that is establishing voluntary technical standards for advanced television systems. ATSC Digital TV Standards include digital high definition television (HDTV), standard definition television (SDTV), data broadcasting, multichannel surround-sound audio, and Satellite direct-to-home broadcasting.
Advanced Television Systems Committee. ATSC is composed of corporations, associations and educational institutions, developing voluntary standards for the entire spectrum of advanced television systems, including high-definition television. In 1996, the U.S. FCC adopted the major elements of the ATSC Digital Television (DTV) Standard, mandating its use for digital terrestrial television broadcasts in the U.S.
"Advanced Television Systems Committee." Formed to establish technical standards for U.S. advanced television systems. Also, the name given to the 8-VSB transmission standard itself.
Advanced Television System Committee. An organization founded in 1983 to research and develop a digital TV standard for the U.S. Or an international organization of 200 members that is establishing voluntary technical standards for advanced television systems.
Advanced Television Systems Committee, Inc. An international organization that develops voluntary standards for digital television and coordinates TV standards across different media, such as digital television, interactive systems, broadband multimedia, HDTV and satellite broadcasting.
Advanced Television Systems Committee - the committee responsible for developing and establishing Digital-HDTV Standards
Advanced Television Systems Committee. The current digital United States television standards (HD, SD and Data).
See Advanced Television Systems Committee.
Established in 1982, the Advanced Television Systems Committee is the group that developed the ATSC digital television standard for the United States, also adopted by Canada, Mexico, South Korea, and recently Honduras and is being considered by other countries.