D-Link DSM-520 Product Manual - Page 122

MPEG-2 and MPEG-4.

Page 122 highlights

DSM-520 User's Manual Glossary MPEG: Short for Moving Picture Experts Group, and pronounced "empeg". MPEG generally produces better-quality video than competing formats. MPEG achieves high compression rate by storing only the changes from one frame to another, instead of each entire frame. MPEG uses a type of lossy compression, since some data is removed. However, the reduction in the resulting video quality is minimal. There are three major MPEG standards: MPEG-1, MPEG-2 and MPEG-4. • The most common implementations of the MPEG-1 standard provide a video resolution of 352-by-240 at 30 frames per second (fps). MPEG-1 is used with Video CDs (VCD) and results in video quality slightly below the quality of a VCR video. • MPEG-2 offers higher resolution with CD-quality audio. This is sufficient for all major TV standards, including NTSC, and even HDTV. MPEG-2 is used by DVDs. MPEG-2 compresses a 2 hour video into a few gigabytes of data on a single disc. • MPEG-4 is a video compression standard based on MPEG-1 and MPEG-2. Videos encoded with MPEG-4 technology are considerably smaller than videos encoded with MPEG-1 or 2. MPEG-4 was standardized in October 1998. Progressive: Displays the video line by line and only takes one field to build one frame of video. The result is a smoother and sharper picture, with high resolution and no motion artifacts. QuickTime: An audio and video compression technology developed by Apple Computer and is widely supported on Macintosh and Windows PC computers. The latest QuickTime implementation is MPEG-4 compliant. Resolution: The DSM-520 can allow resolution up to 480 Interlaced, 480 Progressive, 720 Progressive, or 1080 Interlaced. XviD: XviD is an ISO MPEG-4 compliant video codec. It's an open source project which is developed and maintained by many people from all over the world. D-Link Systems, Inc. 122

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122
DSM-520 User’s Manual
D-Link Systems, Inc.
Glossary
MPEG
: Short for
M
oving
P
icture
E
xperts
G
roup, and pronounced “empeg”. MPEG generally
produces better-quality
video
than competing formats. MPEG achieves high
compression
rate
by storing only the changes from one
frame
to another, instead of each entire frame. MPEG
uses a type of lossy compression, since some data is removed. However,
the reduction in
the resulting video quality is minimal. There are three major MPEG standards: MPEG-1,
MPEG-2 and MPEG-4.
The most common implementations of the MPEG-1 standard provide a video
resolution
of 352-by-240 at 30
frames per second
(fps). MPEG-1 is used with Video CDs (VCD)
and results in video quality slightly below the quality of a VCR video.
MPEG-2 offers higher resolution with CD-quality audio. This is sufficient for all major
TV standards, including
NTSC
, and even
HDTV
. MPEG-2 is used by
DVDs
. MPEG-2
compresses a 2 hour video into a few gigabytes of data on a single disc.
MPEG-4 is a video compression standard based on MPEG-1 and MPEG-2. Videos
encoded with MPEG-4 technology are considerably smaller than videos encoded with
MPEG-1 or 2. MPEG-4 was standardized in October 1998.
Progressive
: Displays the video line by line and only takes one field to build one frame of
video. The result is a smoother and sharper picture, with high resolution and no motion
artifacts.
QuickTime
: An audio and video compression technology developed by Apple Computer
and is widely supported on Macintosh and Windows PC computers.
The latest QuickTime
implementation is MPEG-4 compliant.
Resolution
: The DSM-520 can allow resolution up to 480 Interlaced, 480 Progressive, 720
Progressive, or 1080 Interlaced.
XviD
: XviD is an ISO MPEG-4 compliant video codec. It’s an open source project which is
developed and maintained by many people from all over the world.