IB-DVD1002 (AT)-WM-E-032706
GLOSSARY
Title
The longest sections of a picture or a music
piece on a DVD, or a movie, etc., for a picture
piece on video software; or an album, etc., for
a music piece on an audio software. Each title
is assigned a title number enabling you to
locate the title you want.
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.
JPEG
JPEG is short for the “Joint Photographic Ex-
perts Group”, a group of experts nominated
to produce standards for continuous tone im-
age coding. In other words, your DVD player
can view digital picture CDs or CDs you made
on your computer with file names that end in
the “.JPG” format.
S-Video Cable
This cable can connect to your S-Video input
of your TV. It allows for sharper pictures for
TV sets with this jack. However the sharpest
clearest pictures can be seen when using a
Component Video cable.
Video Cable
This is a wire with plugs on each end which is
used to connect the picture information into
your TV set.
Video Input
This is a jack which accepts the picture portion
of a signal. In order to use this DVD player,
your TV set must have an S-Video (better) or
Video input (standard) jack.
PAL
Phase Alternation Line: a video standard used
in Europe.
YUV
A video standard, it can optimize the translation
of the Video, Y means Luminance, U and V mean
chrominance.
PROGRESSIVE SCAN
Progressive scan, creates a picture signal with
double the scan lines of a conventional interlaced
picture. It creates a noticeably sharper image
and can offer higher picture resolution and
eliminates virtually all motion artifacts. Even on
large screens, the progressive scan lines are
barely noticeable and picture flickering is greatly
reduced, so you can enjoy extended viewing
without eye fatigue. Our progressive-scan DVD
players can handle both progressive and
conventional interlaced video.
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ABOUT DVD REGION
MANAGEMENT
NTSC
National TV Systems Committee for TV
broadcasts: a video standard used in the USA
and Canada.
1
The DVD inventors and motion
picture makers have decided to
break up the world’s DVDs into
regions so that one country’s
This is a legal issue and that is why your
DVD player is restricted to play only region 1
DVDs.
DVDs should not be able to play in another
country.
IB-DVD1002(AT)-WM-E-032706.pmd 7/5/2006, 10:24 AM25