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English
Glossary
Analogue: Sound that has not been switched into
numbers. Analogue sound varies, while digital
sound has speci c numerical values. These sockets
send audio through two channels, the left and
right.
Aspect ratio: The ratio of vertical and horizontal
sizes of a displayed image. The horizontal vs.
vertical ratio of conventional TVs is 4:3, and that
of wide-screens is 16:9.
AUDIO OUT Sockets: Red and white sockets
on the back of the DVD system that send audio to
another system (TV, Stereo, etc.).
Bit rate: The amount of data used to hold a
given length of music; measured in kilobits per
second, or kbps. Or, the speed at which you
record. Generally, the higher the bit rate, or the
higher the recording speed, the better the sound
quality. However, higher bit rates use more space
on a disc.
Chapter: Sections of a picture or a music piece
on a DVD that are smaller than titles. A title is
composed of several chapters. Each chapter is
assigned a chapter number enabling you to locate
the chapter you want.
Component Video Out sockets: Sockets on
the back of the DVD system that send high-quality
video to a TV that has Component Video In
sockets (R/G/B, Y/Pb/Pr, etc.).
Disc menu: A screen display prepared for
allowing a selection of images, sounds, subtitles,
multi-angles, etc. to be recorded on a DVD.
DivX 3.11/4.x/5.x/6.x: The DivX code is a
patent-pending, MPEG-4 based video compression
technology, developed by DivX Networks, Inc.,
that can shrink digital video to sizes small enough
to be transported over the internet, while
maintaining high visual quality.
Dolby Digital: A surround sound system
developed by Dolby Laboratories containing up to
six channels of digital audio (front left and right,
surround left and right, centre and subwoofer).
Dolby Digital EX: A surround sound system
developed by Dolby Laboratories containing up to
seven channels of digital audio (front left and right,
surround left and right, centre front and rear
subwoofer).
Dolby Surround Pro Logic II: It is an improved
matrix decoding technology that provides better
spatiality and directionality on Dolby Surround
programme material, provides a convincing three
dimensional sound  eld on conventional stereo
music recordings and is ideally suited to bring the
surround experience to automotive sound. While
conventional surround programming is fully
compatible with Dolby Surround Pro Logic II
decoders, soundtracks will be able to be encoded
speci cally to take full advantage of Pro Logic II
playback, including separate left and right surround
channels. (Such material also compatible with
conventional Pro Logic decoders).
DTS: Digital Theatre Systems. This is a surround
sound system, but it is different from Dolby
Digital. The formats are developed by different
companies.
HDMI: High-De nition Multimedia
Interface (HDMI) is a high-speed digital
interface that can transmit uncompressed
high de nition video and digital multichannel
audio. It delivers perfect picture and sound
quality, completely free from noise. HDMI is
fully backward-compatible with DVI.
As required by the HDMI standard,
connecting to HDMI or DVI products
without HDCP (High-bandwidth Digital
Content Protection) will result in no Video
or Audio output.
HDCP (High-bandwidth Digital Content
Protection) is a speci cation that provides a
secure transmission of digital contents
between different devices (to prevent
unauthorised copyright).
JPEG: A very common digital still picture format.
A still picture data compression system proposed
by the Joint Photographic Expert Group, which
features small decrease in image quality in spite of
its high compression ratio.
MP3: A  le format with a sound data compression
system. “MP3” is the abbreviation of Motion
Picture Experts Group 1 (or MPEG-1) Audio
Layer3. By using the MP3 format, one CD-R or
CD-RW can contain about 10 times more data
then a regular CD.
53


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