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Video Editing Terms
Video Editing Terms unique to Photoshop Premiere Elements 7
173
Film, Theatre & Television
Graduate
07/09/2010

Additional Film, Theatre & Television Flashcards

 


 

Cards

Term
16:9
Definition
The aspect ratio of widescreen TV
Term
3GP
Definition
Third generation platform. A file format for video recorded by mobile phones.
Term
4:3
Definition
The aspect ratio of conventional video recorded and played back by TV and computer screens.
Term
AC3
Definition
A Dolby Digital audio file, can be found as the standard audio track on Digital Versatile Discs (DVD) and High Definition Television (HDTV). Uses a Codec to process the audio.
Term
ADC (Analog-to-Digital Converter)
Definition
The hardware that converts an analog audio or video signal into a digital signal that you can process with a computer.
Term
AGP slot
Definition
Accelerated graphics port slot. A connector on a computer’s motherboard for use with a GPU card.
Term
Aliasing
Definition
Undesirable jagged or stair-stepped appearance of angled lines in an image, graphic, or text.
Term
Alpha channel
Definition
Stores a matte (also known as a mask), which defines transparent areas of a computer graphic or clip. Color information is stored in the three color channels, red, green, and blue (RGB).
Term
Analog video
Definition
Video that consists of a continuous electrical signal. Most TVs and VCRs are analog video devices. To be stored and manipulated on a computer, analog video must be converted to digital video.
Term
Anti-aliasing
Definition
The smoothing of edges in an image, graphic, or text. Anti-aliased edges appear blurred up close but smooth at normal viewing distance. Anti-aliasing is important when working with high-quality graphics for broadcast.
Term
Artifact
Definition
Distortion in a picture or a sound signal. With digital video, artifacts can result from overloading the input device with too much signal or from excessive or improper compression.
Term
Aspect ratio
Definition
The ratio of an image’s width to its height. For example, a standard video display has an aspect ratio of 4:3. Most motion pictures use the more elongated aspect ratio of 16:9.
Term
Audio sample rate
Definition
The number of samples taken per second to reproduce audio digitally. The higher the sample rate, the higher the quality of the digital audio. A rate of 44,100 samples per second produces CD-quality audio and captures the range of human hearing.
Term
AV-to-DV converter
Definition
An electronic device that converts analog video signals to digital video signals.
Term
AVI
Definition
Audio Video Interleave. The standard, uncompressed video file format on the Microsoft® Windows® platform.
Term
Bit depth
Definition
In digital graphics and video, bit depth indicates the number of colors an image can display. A high-contrast (no gray tones) black and white image is 1bit, meaning it can be off or on, black or white. As bit depth increases, more colors become available. 24-bit color allows for millions of colors to be displayed.

Similarly, in digital audio, bit depth indicates the number of bits per sample. The higher the number, the better the sound quality.
Term
Bitmap
Definition
A graphic image comprised of individual pixels, each of which has values that define its brightness and color.
Term
Blu-ray
Definition
An optical disc format that has five times the storage capacity of DVDs. It can store 25GB on a single-layer disc or 50GB on a dual-layer disc. It gets its name from the blue-violet laser it uses (as opposed to the red laser used by other optical discs).
Term
Bluescreen
Definition
Replacing part of one TV image with video from another image also called keying. Can use the chroma key effect.
Term
Camcorder
Definition
A digital video camera—that is, a device that records sequences of continuous pictures and generates a signal for display or transfer of video footage.
Term
Capture
Definition
The process of transferring source video from a camcorder or tape deck to a computer. If the source video is analog, the capture process converts the video to digital.
Term
Capture card
Definition
Sometimes called a capture or video board. A card installed into a computer and used to digitize video. Or, for video that is already digitized, the device that simply transfers the file to the hard disk.
Term
Channel
Definition
Stores color information for a computer graphic. Each graphic contains three separate channels (red, green, and blue) that can be adjusted independently. Additional channels, called alpha channels, can be added to define transparent areas.
Term
Chroma key
Definition
A video effect that removes an area of specific color. This effect is often used during newscasts to insert a weather map behind a meteorologist.
Term
Chrominance (Chroma)
Definition
The color information in a video signal that comprises the hue (phase angle) and saturation (amplitude).
Term
Cinepak
Definition
A commonly used codec for compression of video files on CD-ROM. Cinepak offers temporal and spatial compression and data-rate limiting.
Term
Clip
Definition
A digitized or captured portion of video, audio, or both.
Term
Codec
Definition
Short for compressor/decompressor. A device or program that uses algorithms to compress video and sound files, making them easier to work with and store, and to decompress files for playback. Common codecs convert analog video signals to compressed digital video files (for example, MPEG) or analog sound signals to digital sound files (for example, RealAudio®).
Term
Color bars
Definition
NTSC color bars are the pattern of eight equal-width color bars used to check broadcast transmission paths, recording quality, playback quality, and monitor alignment.
Term
Color correction
Definition
The process of altering the color of video, especially if it was shot under less than ideal conditions, such as low light.
Term
Compositing
Definition
The process of combining images to yield a resulting “composite” image.
Term
Compression
Definition
The process of reducing data, such as in an audio or video file, into a form that requires less space.
Term
Current-time indicator
Definition
In Adobe Premiere Elements, a gray pointer with a red line in Timeline and Properties, and a gray pointer with a gray line in the Monitor. You drag this indicator to navigate through clips and identify specific frames.
Term
Cut
Definition
The simplest type of transition, in which the last frame of one clip is followed by the first frame of the next.
Term
D1
Definition
Stands for Digital 1, a digital video format that has a 4:3 frame aspect ratio and a 0.9:1 pixel aspect ratio. D1 pixels are rectangular (non-square), unlike analog pixels, which are square. D1 is an international TV standard: D1-NTSC uses a frame size of 720 x 486 pixels, and D1-PAL uses a frame size of 720 x 576 pixels.
Term
Data rate
Definition
The amount of data moved over a period of time (for example, 10 MB per second). Often used to describe a hard drive's ability to retrieve and deliver information.
Term
Decode
Definition
To divide an encoded video signal into its separate components.
Term
Deinterlace
Definition
To remove artifacts that result from interlaced video.
Term
Digital Video
Definition
Video that consists of a binary signal, encoded as a series of zeroes and ones. All data that a computer processes must be digital, so analog video must first be converted to digital video before it can be edited on a computer.
Term
Digitize
Definition
To convert analog video or audio to digital form.
Term
Dissolve
Definition
A fade from one clip into another.
Term
Dithering
Definition
Alternating the colors of adjacent pixels to approximate intermediate colors. (For example, displaying adjacent blue and yellow pixels to approximate green.) Dithering enables monitors to approximate colors they are unable to display.
Term
Dolby Digital
Definition
Standard lossy audio format for DVD video. Supports mono and stereo audio, but is most commonly used to compress 5.1 surround sound with the AC-3 codec.
Term
Drop-frame
Definition
A timecode adjustment that drops certain frames to compensate for the uneven, 29.97 frames-per-second format of color video. Drop-frame timecode is critical in broadcast applications.
Term
Drop-out
Definition
An area of magnetic tape where information is missing. Drop-outs may occur due to dust, overuse, or physical damage. They can cause random, flashing color pixels in affected frames. To avoid drop-outs, use a head-cleaning tape regularly in your camcorder.
Term
Dropped Frames
Definition
Missing frames lost during the process of digitizing or capturing video. Dropped frames can be caused by a hard drive with a low data transfer rate.
Term
DTV
Definition
Digital TV. Occasionally used to refer to desktop video.
Term
DV
Definition
Generally refers to digital video, but also connotes the type of compression used by DV systems and formats. DV also describes the tape cartridge used in DV camcorders and tape decks.
Term
DV in
Definition
The DV input on a camcorder.
Term
DV via USB
Definition
Capability that allows DV camcorders to transfer video using USB 2.0.
Term
DV-to-AV converter
Definition
An electronic device that converts digital video signals into analog video signals.
Term
DVD
Definition
Abbreviation for digital video disc and digital versatile disc. DVDs look like CDs, but have a much larger storage capacity—more than enough for a feature-length film compressed with MPEG-2. DVDs require special drives for playback.
Term
DVD formats
Definition
DVD burners support one or more of the following disc formats: DVD-R, DVD-RW, DVD+R, DVD+RW, DVD+R DL, and DVD-R DL. (Note that -R and +R are different, as are -RW and +RW.) R discs let you record once to the disc. RW discs let you rerecord repeatedly. DL discs are dual layer. Use R discs for broadest compatibility; not all DVD players can read RW discs.
Term
DVD markers
Definition
DVD markers indicate chapters, scenes, and stop points for a DVD menu. In Adobe Premiere Elements, DVD markers are also called scene markers. Clip markers signify important points within a clip. Timeline markers indicate scenes, locations for titles, or other significant points within an entire movie. Clip markers and timeline markers are used for positioning and trimming clips.
Term
EBU timecode
Definition
The timecode system created by the European Broadcasting Union and based on SECAM or PAL video signals.
Term
Encode
Definition
To merge the individual video signals (for example, red, green, and blue) into a combined signal, or to convert a video file to a different format using a codec.
Term
FCC
Definition
Federal Communications Commission, the bureau that regulates radio and TV broadcast standards in the United States.
Term
Fields
Definition
The sets of alternating horizontal lines that create an interlaced image on a TV screen. A complete TV frame consists of two fields: The odd-numbered lines of field one are interlaced with the even-numbered lines of field two.
Term
Final cut
Definition
The final video production, assembled from high-quality clips, and ready for export to the selected delivery media.
Term
FireWire
Definition
The Apple® Computer trade name for “IEEE 1394” which is a is a serial bus interface standard for high-speed communications and isochronous real-time data transfer, frequently used by personal computers, as well as in digital audio, digital video, automotive, and aeronautics applications.
Term
Fps
Definition
Frames per second; the standard for measuring the rate of video playback. At 15 fps and lower, the human eye can detect individual frames, causing video to appear jerky.
Term
Frame
Definition
A single still image in a sequence of images that, when displayed in rapid succession, creates the illusion of motion. The more frames per second (fps), the smoother the motion appears.
Term
Frame rate
Definition
The number of frames per second displayed during playback.
Term
Frequency
Definition
The number of audio cycles per second, expressed in hertz (Hz). Frequency determines the pitch of a sound.
Term
Gamut
Definition
The range of color or brightness values allowed for a video signal. Values that exceed the gamut may cause distortion.
Term
GPU
Definition
Graphics processing unit. A microprocessor with built-in capabilities for handling 3D graphics more efficiently than a CPU (central processing unit).
Term
Grayscale
Definition
The series of visual tones that range from true black to true white. In video applications, grayscale is usually expressed in 10 steps.
Term
HDTV
Definition
High Definition TV. A broadcast format that allows for a higher resolution signal than the traditional formats, NTSC, PAL, and SECAM.
Term
HDV
Definition
High Definition Video. The format used to record HDTV-quality data with video camcorders.
Term
Hue
Definition
The distinction between colors (for example, red, yellow, and blue). White, black, and gray tones are not considered hues.
Term
i.LINK
Definition
Sony® trade name for IEEE 1394.
Term
IEEE 1394
Definition
The interface standard that enables direct transfer of DV between devices, such as a DV camcorder and a computer. IEEE 1394 also describes the cables and connectors utilizing this standard. Also called FireWire or i.LINK.
Term
Image stabilizer
Definition
Also referred to as electronic image stabilizer. A technique used to remove the movement caused by camera shake.
Term
Interframe compression
Definition
A compression scheme, such as MPEG, that reduces the amount of video information by storing only the differences between a frame and those preceding it.
Term
Interlacing
Definition
A system developed for early TV and still in use in standard TV displays. An electron gun illuminates the phosphors coating the inside of the screen, first drawing the even, and then drawing the odd horizontal lines across the screen. By the time the even lines are dimming, the odd lines are illuminated. We perceive these interlaced fields as complete pictures.
Term
Interpolation
Definition
A method for establishing new data points between known data points.
Term
J-cut
Definition
An edit in which the audio starts before the video, giving the video a dramatic introduction. Also known as an audio lead.
Term
JPEG
Definition
Joint Photographic Experts Group. Also, a file format defined by that group for compressing still images. Because video is a sequence of still images, JPEG compression can be used to compress video.
Term
Key
Definition
A method for creating transparency, such as a bluescreen key or a chroma key.
Term
Keyframes
Definition
Start and end points for animated effects. Adobe Premiere Elements automatically generates the frames between keyframes to create smooth movement.
Term
Keying
Definition
Replacing part of one TV image with video from another image. Also called blue screen.
Term
L-cut
Definition
An edit in which the video ends before the audio, which acts as a subtle transition from one scene to the next. To perform an L-cut in the Timeline window, hold down the Alt key and drag the right edge of the video to the left; the result looks like the letter L.
Term
Letterbox
Definition
A technique used to preserve the original aspect ratio of a motion picture when played on a TV. Letterboxing adds black bars to the top and bottom of the screen.
Term
Lossless
Definition
A compression scheme that doesn’t affect signal quality, such as the transfer of DV via an IEEE 1394 connection.
Term
Lossy
Definition
A compression scheme that degrades quality. Lossy algorithms compress digital data by eliminating the data least sensitive to the human eye, and offer the highest compression rates available.
Term
Luminance
Definition
The effect of the combined values for brightness and contrast.
Term
Machinima
Definition
A method for creating movies that combines traditional filmmaking, animation, and virtual 3D gaming technology. Machinima is the combined form of “machine/cinema” or “machine/animation.”
Term
Markers
Definition
DVD markers indicate chapters, scenes, and stop points for a DVD menu. In Adobe Premiere Elements, DVD markers are also called scene markers. Clip markers signify important points within a clip. Timeline markers indicate scenes, locations for titles, or other significant points within an entire movie. Clip markers and timeline markers are used for positioning and trimming clips.
Term
Mask
Definition
The transparent area of an image, typically defined by a graphic shape or a bluescreen background. Also called a matte.
Term
Matte
Definition
The transparent area of an image, typically defined by a graphic shape or a bluescreen background. Also called a mask.
Term
MIDI
Definition
Musical Instrument Digital Interface. A standard used to share data between electronic music equipment and computers.
Term
Mini-timeline
Definition
A timeline that appears at the bottom of the Monitor panel when the Sceneline is displayed.
Term
MJPEG
Definition
Motion JPEG. A compression standard used to convert each video frame into a compressed JPEG image. MJPEG is best suited for broadcast-quality video, and is preferable over MPEG for footage that contains a great deal of movement.
Term
Motion menu
Definition
A DVD menu that has a moving background image instead of a still image, animated buttons, or both.
Term
MP3
Definition
MPEG-1 Audio Layer 3. Both a compression standard and a file format for digital audio.
Term
MPEG
Definition
Motion Pictures Expert Group. Also, a type of compression and a video format. Unlike JPEG, where individual frames are compressed, MPEG compression calculates and encodes only the differences between one frame and its preceding frame.
Term
MPEG-1
Definition
Compression standard used to convert analog video for use in digital applications. It was designed to deliver near-broadcast-quality video through a standard speed CD-ROM. The compression ratio is about 100:1.
Term
MPEG-2
Definition
Extension of the MPEG-1 standard. It was designed to meet the requirements of TV broadcast studios. MPEG-2 is the broadcast-quality video found on DVDs and requires a decoder for playback.
Term
MPEG-3
Definition
Developed for HDTV but became obsolete when MPEG-2 was discovered to adequately meet HDTV requirements. Often confused with MP3.
Term
MPEG-4
Definition
Builds on previous MPEG standards, adding support for streaming video and improved compression schemes. Often used for video podcasting.
Term
Native Editing
Definition
Refers to editing originally captured clips, both DV and HDV, at their original, uncompressed quality.
Term
Neutral colors
Definition
The range of grays, from black to white, that have no color. For neutral color areas, RGB values are equal.
Term
Noise
Definition
Distortions of an audio or video signal, usually caused by interference.
Term
Noise Reduction
Definition
The reduction of noise during recording or playback.
Term
Non-drop-frame
Definition
Timecode method that uses the color TV frame rate of 29.97 fps. Non-drop-frame timecode is preferred for nonbroadcast applications and most of low-end videotape formats.
Term
Nonlinear editing
Definition
Random-access editing of video and audio on a computer, enabling edits at any point in the timeline. By contrast, traditional videotape editors are linear because they require editing video sequentially, from beginning to end.
Term
NTSC
Definition
National Television Standards Committee. Standard for color TV transmission used in North America, Japan, Central America, and some countries in South America. NTSC incorporates an interlaced display with 60 fields per second, 29.97 frames per second (fps).
Term
NTSC color bars
Definition
The pattern of eight equal-width color bars used to check broadcast transmission paths, recording quality, playback quality, and monitor alignment.
Term
NTSC RGB
Definition
Interlaced red, green, and blue video signals that meet NTSC standards and represent the primary colors of an image.
Term
Offline editing
Definition
Editing a rough cut using low-quality clips, and then producing the final cut with high-quality clips, usually on a more sophisticated editing system than that used for developing the rough.
Term
Online editing
Definition
Doing all editing (including the rough cut) on the same clips that will be used to produce the final cut.
Term
PAL
Definition
Phase alternating line. The TV standard used in most European and South American countries. PAL uses an interlaced display with 50 fields per second, 25 frames per second.
Term
PCI slot
Definition
A connection slot for expansion cards found in most computers. Most video capture cards require a PCI slot.
Term
Peak file
Definition
A cache file that contains the waveform image of an audio file. Peak files allow a program to open, save, and redraw audio files more quickly because the program doesn’t have to reread the waveform data each time it opens or displays an audio file. Peak files (*.pk) can be deleted without affecting the original audio files.
Term
Pixel
Definition
An abbreviation for picture element, the smallest display element on a computer monitor—a point with a specific color and intensity level. Graphics programs use square pixels. However, NTSC and PAL video pixels are rectangular, so computer graphics displayed on a TV screen will be distorted (for example, a circle will appear as an oval) unless the aspect ratio of the graphics is adjusted for video.
Term
Pixel shader
Definition
In 3D graphics, a program that a GPU uses to render the lighting and color of individual pixels, creating realistic-looking surfaces. (Not all GPUs support pixel shaders.) Pixel shaders are commonly used in creating graphics for computer games.
Term
Plug-in
Definition
A software module that can extend the features of a software application. In Adobe Premiere Elements, for example, you can use VST plug-ins to add audio effects.
Term
Podcasting
Definition
Delivering audio or video files to mobile devices via the web.
Term
Poster frame
Definition
A single frame of a clip, selected as a thumbnail to indicate the clip’s contents.
Term
Preview files
Definition
Files that store information about tracks and effects in a project. Preview files are created during the rendering process and stored on the hard drive. They save time during the final export of a movie because the video edition application can use the information in the preview files rather than render clips again.
Term
Printing to tape
Definition
Recording a digital video file to videotape.
Term
Project preset
Definition
A predefined set of values that can be used for project settings.
Term
Quicktime (MOV)
Definition
Apple Computer's format for video, sound, and 3D media.
Term
Raster
Definition
A grid of pixels forming the image on a TV or computer screen.
Term
Raw footage
Definition
Original, unedited film or video footage that has not been modified.
Term
Real time
Definition
Instantaneous processing of data. In video, real time refers to effects and transitions you can preview without interrupting the rendering process.
Term
Region coding
Definition
A DVD feature that restricts playback of a disc to players in a specific region.
Term
Rendering
Definition
The process of applying edits, effects, and transitions to video frames.
Term
Resolution
Definition
The number of pixels in each frame of video (for example, 640 x 480). All other things being equal, a higher resolution will result in a better-quality image.
Term
RGB
Definition
Red, green, blue. The three primary colors, which are used to display color on a computer monitor or TV screen.
Term
Ripple edit
Definition
The automatic forward or backward movement of clips in the Timeline in relation to an inserted or deleted clip.
Term
Rolling Edit
Definition
The automatic change in the duration of an adjoining clip when a clip is inserted or extracted, or when the duration of a clip is altered.
Term
Rough cut
Definition
A preliminary version of a video production, often assembled from lower quality clips than those used for the final cut.
Term
S-Video
Definition
Super-Video. A technology used to transmit video by dividing the video information into two separate signals: one for luminance (brightness) and one for chrominance (color).
Term
S/N
Definition
Signal to Noise ratio
Term
Sample rate
Definition
In digital audio, the number of samples per second. The higher the number, the better the sound quality.
Term
Saturation
Definition
The strength or purity of a color. Saturation represents the amount of gray in proportion to the hue, measured as a percentage from 0% (gray) to 100% (fully saturated).
Term
Scene Detection
Definition
Automatic detection of scene changes in video clips. You can use scene detection when capturing video (though not when capturing HDV), or you can use it on captured clips. Adobe Premiere Elements supports image-based scene detection.
Term
Sceneline
Definition
Provides a visual layout of media clips so you can quickly arrange your clips, as well as add titles, transitions, and effects.
Term
Scrubbing
Definition
Shuttling audio or video material forward or backward while previewing.
Term
SECAM
Definition
Systeme Electronique Couleur Avec Memoire, a TV format used mainly in Eastern Europe, Russia, and Africa. In these countries, TVs support both SECAM and PAL, but DV camcorders and DVD players use only PAL. Therefore, Adobe Premiere Elements users in these countries should use the PAL preset for projects and DVDs.
Term
Signal-to-noise ratio (S/N)
Definition
Expressed in decibels (dB), the ratio of noise relative to the desired video or audio signal. The higher the value, the clearer the picture and sound.
Term
Slide edit
Definition
An editing feature that adjusts the Out point of the previous clip and the In point of the next clip without affecting the center clip or program duration.
Term
Slip edit
Definition
An editing feature that adjusts the In and Out points of a clip without affecting the adjacent clips or program duration.
Term
Snow
Definition
Random noise on a video screen, often the result of a dirty videotape head or poor TV reception.
Term
Source footage
Definition
Raw, unedited video that has been recorded by a camera.
Term
Spatial compression
Definition
A compression method that reduces the data contained within a single video frame by identifying areas of similar color and eliminating the redundancy. Also refers to Codec.
Term
Splitscreen
Definition
A special effect that displays two or more scenes simultaneously on different parts of the screen.
Term
Square-pixel footage
Definition
Footage that has a 1:1 pixel aspect ratio, typically analog video. Most computer graphics have a 1:1 pixel aspect ratio.
Term
Still frame
Definition
A single frame of video repeated so it appears to have no motion.
Term
Storyboard
Definition
A series of images representing each clip in a movie. You rearrange the images to change the order in which clips appear. In Premiere Elements, storyboard-style editing occurs in the Sceneline.
Term
Straight cut
Definition
The most common edit; consecutive clips placed one after another in the Timeline window. Straight cuts are preferable to transitions when the scenes are similar and you don’t want edits to be noticeable.
Term
Streaming
Definition
The process of playing video from the web as it is received, rather than waiting for an entire file to download prior to playback.
Term
Striping
Definition
Preparing a tape for editing by recording a video signal (for example, black) with a control track and timecode to ensure proper playback. Also known as black stripe.
Term
Superimposing
Definition
Combining images, where one or more layers involve transparency.
Term
Temporal compression
Definition
A compression method that identifies similar areas across video frames and eliminates the redundancy.
Term
Timecode
Definition
A time format that measures video in hours, minutes, seconds, and frames (for example, 1:20:24:09), enabling precise editing.
Term
Timeline
Definition
The graphical element in a video-editing program on which video, audio, and graphics clips are arranged.
Term
Transcoding
Definition
Translating a file from one file format into another; that is, reencoding the data.
Term
Transforming
Definition
Changing the position of objects (for example, text or graphics) by moving, rotating, aligning, or distributing them.
Term
Transition
Definition
A change in video from one clip to another. Often these visual changes involve effects in which elements of one clip are blended with another.
Term
Transparency
Definition
Percentage of opacity of a video clip or element.
Term
Trimming
Definition
Removing frames from the beginning, middle, or end of a clip.
Term
Tweening
Definition
A feature that fills in the frames between two images so movement appears smoother.
Term
Uncompressed video
Definition
Raw digitized video displayed or stored in its native size.
Term
USB
Definition
Universal Serial Bus. The interface standard that allows a plug-and-play experience, where you can add a new device to your computer without having to install an adapter card or configuring other elements.
Term
Vertex shader
Definition
In 3D graphics, a program that a GPU uses to render effects realistically, relative to an object’s position in space. (Not all GPUs support vertex shaders.) Vertex shaders are commonly used in creating graphics for computer games.
Term
Video format
Definition
A standard that determines the way a video signal is recorded on videotape. Standards include DV, 8-mm, Beta, and VHS.
Term
VOB
Definition
DVD Video Object. The VOB format is commonly used to distribute movies on DVDs; video, audio, title streams, and menu contents are combined in a single file. The video stream is typically MPEG-2.
Term
WDM
Definition
Windows Driver Model. A driver standard developed by Microsoft that allows a wide range of hardware devices to connect to your computer. WDM provides plug-and-play support for devices such as USB webcams and streaming camcorders.
Term
Widescreen
Definition
Any aspect ratio for film and video wider than the standard 4:3 format; previously used to refer to wide-aspect film formats; now typically used to refer to the 16:9 format that has become standard widescreen for DVD, because this is the aspect ratio specified for HDTV.
Term
WMV
Definition
Windows Media Video. A format developed by Microsoft that’s optimized for streaming video playback over the web.
Term
Zooming
Definition
Moving the focus of a camera either closer to or farther from a subject while shooting.
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