Multimedia Video
Multimedia Video
Video
Overview
Using video. How video works? Broadcast video standards. Analog video. Digital video. Video recording and tape formats. Shooting and editing video. Optimizing video files for CD-ROM.
Video
Video is the most recent addition to the elements of multimedia
It places the greatest demands on the computer and memory (using about 108 GB per hour for full motion)
Often requires additional hardware (video compression board, audio board, RAID - Redundant Array of Independent Disks- for high speed data transfer)
Using Video
Carefully planned video can enhance a presentation (eg. film clip of JFK, better than an text box of same message)
Before adding video to a project, it is essential to understand the medium, how to integrate it, its limitations, and its costs
Digital video device produces excellent finished products at a fraction of the cost of analog.
Many digital video sources exist, but getting the rights can be difficult, time-consuming, and expensive.
Video Clips
Ways to obtain video shoot new film clips with a digital camcorder convert your own video clips to digital format acquire video from an archive - often very expensive, difficult to obtain permissions or licensing rights
Be sure to obtain permission from anyone you film or for any audio you use!
Video Basics
The control track regulates the speed and keeps the tracks aligned as the tape plays/records.
Video Basics
SECAM
HDTV
Computer video is based on digital technology and other image display standards
Analog Video
Analog television sets remain the most widely installed platforms for delivering and viewing video. Television sets use composite input. Hence colors are less pure and less accurate than computers using RGB component.
NTSC television uses a limited color palette and restricted luminance (brightness) levels and black levels.
Analog Video
Some colors generated by a computer that display fine on a RGB monitor may be illegal for display on a NTSC TV.
While producing a multimedia project, consider whether it will be played on a RGB monitor or a conventional television set.
A special digitizing video overly board is required for the conversion. Produces excellent quality, full screen, full motion video, but costly.
Interlacing Effects
The TV electron beam actually draws all the odd line, then all the even lines, interlacing them On a computer (RGB) monitor, lines are painted one pixel thick and are not interlaced. Displayed on a TV they flicker because they appear in every other field. To avoid this avoid very thin lines and elaborate lines.
Video Color
Color reproduction and display are also different in TV and computers monitors Computers use RBG component video and produce more pure color NTSC TV uses a limited color palette and restricted luminance (brightness) and black levels
Digital Video
Digital video architecture. Digital video compression.
Video Compression
To store even a 10 second movie clip requires the transfer of an enormous amount of data in a very short time 30 seconds of video will fill a 1 GB hard drive Typical hard drives transfer about 1MB/second and CD- ROMs about 600K/second
Video Compression
Full motion video requires the computer to deliver the data at 30 MB/second more than todays PCs and MACs can handle Solution- use video compression algorithms or codecs Codecs compress the video for delivery and then decode it for playback at rates from 50:1 to 200:1
MPEG
Standard developed by the Moving PIcturesExperts Group for digital representation of moving pictures and associated audio http://mpeg.org
Digital Video
Video clips can be shot or converted to digital format and stored on the hard drive. They can be played back without overlay boards, second monitors or videodiscs using QuickTime or Active Movie for Windows Analog video can be converted to digital or now created in digital form
Composite Digital
Composite digital recording formats combine the luminance and chroma information. They sample the incoming waveforms and encode the information in binary (0/1) digital code. It improves color and image resolution and eliminates generation loss.
Component Digital
Component digital formats add the advantages of component signals to digital recording. D-1 component digital format is an uncompressed format which has a very high quality image. It uses a 19 mm (3/4-inch) tape in order to save data. Several other digital component formats are DCT, Digital Betacam, DV format, DVCPRO, and DVCAM formats.
ATSC Digital TV
These standards provide for digital STV and HDTV recordings that can be broadcast by digital TV transmitters to digital TV receivers. ATSC standards also provide for enhanced TV bringing the interactivity of multimedia and the Web to broadcast television.
Recording Formats
S-VHS and Hi-8 consumer quality Component (YUV) - Sony BetacamSP the professional standard for broadcast quality Component Digital- a digital version of the Betacam- best format for graphics > $900,000 and produces 15 minutes of video Composite Digital most common >$110,000
P*64
Video telephone conferencing standard for compressing audio and motion video images Encodes audio and video for transmission over copper or fiber optic lines Other compression systems are currently being developed by Kodak, Sony, etc.
Use regularly spaced key frames (10 to 15 frames apart) Limit the size of the video windowthe more data the slower the playback
Summary
Various video standards are NTSC, PAL, SECAM, and ATSC DTV. Categories of video standards are composite analog, component analog, composite digital, and component digital.