Difference between revisions of "Category:Still video"

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{{Flickr_image
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|image_source= http://www.flickr.com/photos/whinger/512943532/in/pool-camerawiki
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|image=  http://farm1.staticflickr.com/225/512943532_f0a24a1f4a_m.jpg
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|image_align= right
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|image_text= Standard Video Floppy (about 2" square)<br/>used in most still-video cameras
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|image_by= Corey Holms
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|image_rights= nc
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'''Still-video cameras''', or SVCs, are electronic cameras derived from television technology. Unlike a digital camera, images are recorded in the form of analog scan lines (typically onto a compact Video Floppy disk, which by the late-1980s had become an industry standard). Standard television uses interlaced images, where every other scan line is recorded as a single "field." Many SVCs had the ability to combine two field images into a single "frame" image, with higher resolution—although this halved the number of images a video floppy could hold (from 50 to 25).
 
==Links==
 
==Links==
 
Text in Chinese:
 
Text in Chinese:
 
*[http://dgbest.tom.com/article.php?id=20928 Gallery of still-video cameras] displayed at CP+ trade show, 2011; from [http://dgbest.tom.com/ Tom.com DGBest]
 
*[http://dgbest.tom.com/article.php?id=20928 Gallery of still-video cameras] displayed at CP+ trade show, 2011; from [http://dgbest.tom.com/ Tom.com DGBest]
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[[Category:Cameras]]
 
[[Category:Cameras]]
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[[Category:Imaging media]]

Revision as of 17:49, 15 October 2014

Still-video cameras, or SVCs, are electronic cameras derived from television technology. Unlike a digital camera, images are recorded in the form of analog scan lines (typically onto a compact Video Floppy disk, which by the late-1980s had become an industry standard). Standard television uses interlaced images, where every other scan line is recorded as a single "field." Many SVCs had the ability to combine two field images into a single "frame" image, with higher resolution—although this halved the number of images a video floppy could hold (from 50 to 25).

Links

Text in Chinese: