For 1500 dollars I can buy a better CPU,mobo and graphic card to get my computer as fast or faster than overclocking my current one.
Re:You can do the same SVHS signal VHS tape too...
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DVHS on a Budget
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I used to work for VMS, and we used the VS4820s almost exclusivly along with broadcast-grade SVHS and VHS tapes baught in bulk (for archival, editing, and professional video selling)
I work for a Broadcast station and we would never use SVHS for broadcast. We only have SVHS for legel logs and previews. I think SVHS should be classified as Pro grade not broadcast.
I'm a chief engineer of a large station and I never heard of such a flag. We broadcast HD material all the time. I know for a fact, I don't or have the equipment to put a broadcast flag on HD or SD content.
If you take the time to do a good QA, you get complaints that it's taking too long to release the product. If you don't QA the product, you get complaints about problems in your product. It's a no win scenario. You just have to balance both.
An ATSC channel is 19.39 Mb/s. We broadcast 4 SDI streams during the day (4 Mb/s each) plus 2 channels of AES audio for each and PSIP info for the stream. I normally have only about 250-500 k of headroom. At night, we have our main PBS feed in SDI (4 Mb/s) and about 14 Mb/s of HD. This feed comes from the main PBS down link and its not just pretty pictures.This is a listing of whats on tonight on our PBS station for today: http://www.klrn.org/Programming/dtvschedule.aspx
For an off-air digital broadcast we get 19.3 Meg of bandwidth. When we air a true HD program we give it a minimum of 14 Meg. A native HDSDI stream is 1.5 gig. Even when it gets mux'ed into a ASI stream its 270 meg.
I agree. If you only had to compress B/W video and run it through a filter like this, Less bandwidth would be needed.
on this car computer you put Windows on as the os you would be prone to crashing.
their are plenty of them out there to hack into.
For 1500 dollars I can buy a better CPU,mobo and graphic card to get my computer as fast or faster than overclocking my current one.
I used to work for VMS, and we used the VS4820s almost exclusivly along with broadcast-grade SVHS and VHS tapes baught in bulk (for archival, editing, and professional video selling) I work for a Broadcast station and we would never use SVHS for broadcast. We only have SVHS for legel logs and previews. I think SVHS should be classified as Pro grade not broadcast.
I'm a chief engineer of a large station and I never heard of such a flag. We broadcast HD material all the time. I know for a fact, I don't or have the equipment to put a broadcast flag on HD or SD content.
If you take the time to do a good QA, you get complaints that it's taking too long to release the product. If you don't QA the product, you get complaints about problems in your product. It's a no win scenario. You just have to balance both.
Only when you swipe it backwards.
someone or many will use it
I hope he's not using this site for an update on his progress. It took damn near the 80 hours to load the page.
with that new 512 Meg ATI video card, we will get nothing for more.
Speakers that reproduce perfect frequency responce in the 30-40 khz range?
For the pictures. Not like Playboy, for the articals
An ATSC channel is 19.39 Mb/s. We broadcast 4 SDI streams during the day (4 Mb/s each) plus 2 channels of AES audio for each and PSIP info for the stream. I normally have only about 250-500 k of headroom. At night, we have our main PBS feed in SDI (4 Mb/s) and about 14 Mb/s of HD. This feed comes from the main PBS down link and its not just pretty pictures.This is a listing of whats on tonight on our PBS station for today: http://www.klrn.org/Programming/dtvschedule.aspx
For an off-air digital broadcast we get 19.3 Meg of bandwidth. When we air a true HD program we give it a minimum of 14 Meg. A native HDSDI stream is 1.5 gig. Even when it gets mux'ed into a ASI stream its 270 meg.