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good book on color tv?
 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2013-04-15 07:15 [#02453908]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



this book is about what i want, but it's out of
print.

mainly interested in video signals as opposed to CRTs and
yokes, which are high-voltage and scare me.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2013-04-15 07:16 [#02453909]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



on google. what a cocktease; they remove random pages
just to be jerks.


 

offline spammer from CITY OF LONDON (Jamaica) on 2013-04-15 07:51 [#02453914]
Points: 160 Status: Addict



you should not let poets lie to you


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2013-04-15 08:02 [#02453915]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



if i click that, will it be bjork saying her tv innards look
like a city?


 

offline khrimson from the fridge on 2013-04-15 19:27 [#02453991]
Points: 1757 Status: Regular



this?


 

offline khrimson from the fridge on 2013-04-15 19:29 [#02453992]
Points: 1757 Status: Regular



Digital Video and HD: Algorithms and Interfaces provides a
one-stop shop for the theory and engineering of digital
video systems. Equally accessible to video engineers and
those working in computer graphics, Charles Poynton’s
revision to his classic text covers emergent compression
systems, including H.264 and VP8/WebM, and augments detailed
information on JPEG, DVC, and MPEG-2 systems. This edition
also introduces the technical aspects of file-based
workflows and outlines the emerging domain of metadata,
placing it in the context of digital video processing. With
the help of hundreds of high quality technical
illustrations, this book presents the following topics:
Basic concepts of digitization, sampling, quantization,
gamma, and filtering Principles of color science as applied
to image capture and display Scanning and coding of SDTV and
HDTV Video color coding: luma, chroma (4:2:2 component
video, 4fSC composite video) Analog NTSC and PAL Studio
systems and interfaces Compression technology, including
M-JPEG and MPEG-2 Broadcast standards and consumer video
equipment



 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2013-04-15 20:15 [#02453996]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



i very much appreciate you bothering, but flipping through
it thus far has been disappointing. i'm certainly not
deleting it, but this seems really from a software
perspective, and i'm after a book with schematics and
schmitt triggers. for now i really am largely interested in
properly utilizing a large amount of 80s video equipment
someone was nice enough to give me. i really don't care
about anything involving computers for the moment, with it.
HD is like, not even on my fucking radar.

i have shit like: two identical cameras that cost $1500 in
the 80s. they're gorgeous; both the hardware and the
picture. but i have this morass of sync inputs and outputs
and how do i synchronize the clock between two cameras so i
can do a proper 3D youtube video?

stuff like that. so i guess i want a book more towards the
80s or 90s.

amazed anyone got back to me at all, though. cheers !


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2013-04-15 20:24 [#02454000]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



here's a more direct one: i want to film a TV with a camera
because i like the CRT's tone, and i want to sync both the
TV and the camera up to dodge flicker.


 

offline EpicMegatrax from Greatest Hits on 2013-04-15 20:39 [#02454002]
Points: 25264 Status: Regular



i also feel very lost trying to build circuits for video. my
first stab -- an a/b video switcher controlled by a gate
signal -- worked, by no small miracle. but i really need a
more proper grasp of this; i can't get much further just
guessing.


 


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