Video stored in a binary (computer) format.
A signal in computer data form, which creates images and sound.
Refers to the capturing, manipulation, and storage of video using a digital format, such as QuickTime. A digital video camcorder, for example, is a video camera that captures and stores images on a digital medium such as DV. Video can then be easily imported.
Compact videocassette format that stores numbers on tape instead of an analog representation of the image, providing the highest resolution and color richness of any consumer format. DV tapes can be copied from one unit to another through a special connector (FireWire or IEEE 1394) with no generation loss.
A video signal represented by binary numbers describing a finite set of colors and luminance levels. In accordance with "CCIR 601," the international digital video standard for sampling, the conversion from analog to digital suffers virtually no loss.
Refers to video which has been compressed into digital information for storage onto digital storage media like a hard disk drive, CD, or DVD. The quality of digital video will vary depending on factors such as the camera quality and compression method.
A term referring to moving pictures that are stored on a computer hard disk for editing or playback. Digital video files vary in terms of their image size (measured in horizontal and vertical pixels) and their frame rate (measured in frames per second.)
A recording process that captures each image frame as binary data.
Motion video from a Digital Video (DV) camcorder, (Firewire connection). At 720 x 480, 30 fps, DV format consumes 1 Gig of disk space per 5 minutes of video. MovieWorks can capture and export to DV devices, and may also export as a .dv file that may be imported into DVD authoring programs or other DV editing packages like iMovie.
These are video signals that have been encoded as a series of binary digits. In this format they can be captured and manipulated in a computer program.
A set of moving images (with or without sound) that is viewable and manipulatable on a computer. Digital video can originate on a computer or be digitized from an analog source. DV (short for digital video) is a specific video format used in digital video cameras and other hardware. QuickTime, MPEG, AVI and Real Video are just a few of the many popular formats for digital video.
The latest medium for videographers, DV allows for the cleanest possible capture of moving images. DV is also light sensitive so camera operators need less to no additional lighting. Additionally, it will not discernibly degrade with duplication, which means copies of your wedding video will look as good as the master.
Usually taken from a National Television Systems Committee (NTSC) source (standard over the air North American analog TV) and adapted to be shown on a computer display. A video camera, a VCR or a CD-ROM can be a source. Video is then digitized and compressed for storage, then retrieved and decompressed to be shown. Two common digital video technologies are Intel's Digital Video Interactive (DVI) and Microsoft's Audio/Video Interleaved (AVI).
Digital video is the key to content when streaming media. Digital video is an alternative way of storing or distributing video. Digital video is usually converted from an analog video source. A digital video signal is represented in '1's and '0's, whereas an analog video signal is represented by a fluctuating voltage signal that is stored on magnetic tape. This difference is similar to the difference between analog audio and digital audio.
Video where all the instructions for the images are in computer data form, i.e. bits.
A video that has been digitized so that it can be controlled from a PC and displayed directly on a computer monitor.
video recorded in binary form. Digital video allows material recorded on a digital video camcorder to be transferred to a computer, edited and then delivered in a variety of different formats, including the re-streaming of material back to the camera with no loss of quality.
A video signal stored in binary format. To process and store video on a computer, it must first be converted to a binary format. Most digital video cameras are capable of outputting video directly to a hard drive in this format via IEEE 1394 interface. DV is a good format to input into a compression and editing application, but the file sizes are too large for effective delivery over the Internet.
Video images stored, broadcast or displayed in a digital format
Moving images, in a digital (versus analog) format that can be presented on a television or on a computer monitor.
The latest video formats are digital in design. This allows for a more pure recording, and a cleaner signal with which to edit. The primary digital video formats are DVCam, DVCPro, and MiniDV. Each of these has their own strengths, and is supported by different manufacturers.
a video that has been digitized and played back on a digital monitor.
Video images and sound stored in a digital format. Acronym: DV.
A video signal made up of binary numbers (0s and 1s) that describe color and brightness.
Digital video is a type of video recording system that works by using a digital, rather than analog, representation of the video signal. This generic term is not to be confused with the name DV, which is a specific type of digital video targeted at the consumer market. Digital video is most often recorded on tape, then distributed on optical discs, usually DVDs.