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Chapter Overview of Analog and Digital Technologies

Digitization of Audio.ppt

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Page 1: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Chapter

Overview of Analog and Digital Technologies

Page 2: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Chapter Objectives• Explain the basic concepts of analog and

digital technology • Show the importance of frequency spectrum to

communication along with an explanation of the concept of bandwidth

• Give an overview of the interface technology between analog and digital technology

• Describe the process of digitizing data, audio, image and video

• Discuss quality retention in digital transmission

Page 3: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Chapter Modules

• Overview of analog technology• Frequency spectrum and bandwidth• Digital technology• Digital-to-Analog and Analog-to-Digital

Interfaces• Overview of Digitization of Information• Digitization of Data • Digitization of Audio Continued

Page 4: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Continuation of Chapter Modules

• Quality retention in digital transmission

• Digitization of image• Digitization of video

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MODULE

Overview of Analog Technology

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Areas of Application

• Old telephone networks• Most television broadcasting at

present• Radio broadcasting

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Analog Signals: The Basics

Cycle

Time

Signal

Amplitude

Frequency = Cycle/Second

A typical sine wave

Page 8: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Amplitude and Cylce

• Amplitude– Distance above reference line

• Cycle– One complete wave

Page 9: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Frequency

• Frequency– Cycles per second – Hertz is the unit used for expressing

frequency

• Frequency spectrum – Defines the bandwidth for different

analog communication technologies

Page 10: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Information Representation Using

Analog Signals• Information can be represented

using analog signals• Analog signals cannot be

manipulated easily• Analog signals must be digitized

for computer processing

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Analog Digital Conversion

1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0

A to D Converters, Digital Signal Processors (DSP)

etc.

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Data Transmission Example

Computer ModemDigital0s and 1s

Analog0s and 1s

Digital-to-Analog Modulation and vice versa

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Voice Transmission Example

Voice

Carrier Wave

AM Radio Transmission

Analog-to-Analog Modulation

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END OF MODULEEND OF MODULE

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MODULE

Frequency Spectrumand Bandwidth

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Frequency Spectrum Defined

• Available range of frequencies for communication

• Starts from low frequency communication such as voice and progresses to high frequency communication such as satellite communication

• The spectrum spans the entire bandwidth of communicable frequencies

Page 17: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Frequency Spectrum

Low Frequency High Frequency

Radio Frequency

CoaxialCable

MHz

SatelliteTransmission

MicrowaveMHz

Voice

KHz

Page 18: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Frequency Spectrum

• Low-end– Voice band

• Middle– Microwave

• High-end– Satellite communication

Page 19: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Bandwidth Definition

• Bandwidth, in general, represents a range of frequencies

300 MHz 700 MHz

Bandwidth is 400 MHz

Page 20: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Usage of the Term Bandwidth

• To specify the communication capacity– A medium such as a coaxial cable is

associated with a bandwidth

• To indicate the bandwidth of a technology– Voice grade circuits have a bandwidth

of 4 KHz (0-4000 Hz)

Page 21: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Communication Capacity

• Bandwidth is indicative of the communication capacity

• Communication speed is proportional to bandwidth– Shanon’s law

• Units used to represent bandwidth are MHz, Mbps etc.

Page 22: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Coaxial Cable Example

• Bandwidth of 300 MHz • Comparison with twisted pair

– Higher bandwidth– Supports faster communication speeds– Supports multi-drop connection

CoaxialCable

Multi-drop

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Limiting Factors on Communication Speed

Communication SpeedBandwidth Technology

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Continuation of Bandwidth and Technology on

Communication Speed• Bandwidth limitation

– Use better technology such as data compression used in modems to increase speed of communication

• Bandwidth and technology limitation– Move to higher bandwidth media such

as fiber cables

Page 25: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Speed Dependency on Bandwidth and

Technology

Medium 1

Technology Medium 2

Higher Bandwidth

Medium 1 example can be shielded twisted pair and medium 2 example can be fiber.

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END OF MODULEEND OF MODULE

Page 27: Digitization of Audio.ppt

MODULE

An Overview of Digital Technology

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Areas of Application

• Computers• New telephone networks• Phased introduction into television

broadcasting

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Digital Technology

• Basis– Digital signals that could be assigned

digital values

• Digital computer technology– Digital signals – Binary representation

• Encoded into ones and zeros

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Processing using computer technology Programmable services Better quality due to being able to

reconstruct exact digital patterns at the receiving end

Faster communication speeds are possible

Digital Advantage

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Digital Signal

1 0 1 1 0 1 0 0

Pulse

Time

Sig

nal

Str

eng

th

Pulse Duration

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Clock Speed and Pulse Duration

PulseDuration

MHz

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Clock Speed and Execution Speed

• Pulse duration is inversely proportional to the clock frequency

• Faster the clock speed, the smaller the pulse duration

• Smaller the pulse duration, the faster the execution in general

Page 34: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Clock Speed and Communication Speed

• Faster the clock speed, smaller the pulse duration

• Smaller the pulse duration, smaller the time taken to transmit one bit of information

• Therefore, faster the clock speed measured in MHz, faster the communication speed measured in Mbps in general

Page 35: Digitization of Audio.ppt

END OF MODULEEND OF MODULE

Page 36: Digitization of Audio.ppt

MODULE

Digital-to-Analog and Analog-to-Digital Interfaces

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The Need for Conversion

• Analog-to-Digital – Connection of a computer to an

analog communication line

• Digital-to-Digital – Connection of a computer to a digital

ISDN line

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Digital-to-Analog Interface

Comp.Sys. 1

Comp.Sys. 2Modem Modem

DigitalSerialRS-232C

DigitalSerialRS-232C

AnalogITU V.90

POTS

Page 39: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digital-to-Digital InterfaceA

Comp.Sys. 1

Comp.Sys. 2

ISDNAdapter

ISDNAdapter

DigitalSerialRS-232C

DigitalSerialRS-232C

Digital ISDN

Page 40: Digitization of Audio.ppt

END OF MODULEEND OF MODULE

Page 41: Digitization of Audio.ppt

MODULE

Overview of Digitization Of Information

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Module Objectives

• Define the representations of information

• Explain the need to digitize• State the advantages of

digitization

Page 43: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digital Information Processing

Data

Audio

Image

Video

Digitized and Encoded

DigitalTransmission

Page 44: Digitization of Audio.ppt

The Need to Digitize

• Essential for computer processing• Essential for transmission

– Entry point to networks is a often a computer

– An increasing number of communication lines are digital lines

Page 45: Digitization of Audio.ppt

The Advantages of Digitization

• Information could be processed by the computer

• Easy transmission of information• Minimize loss of quality during

transmission

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END OF MODULEEND OF MODULE

Page 47: Digitization of Audio.ppt

MODULE

Digitization Of Data

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Codes Used in the Digitization Of Data

• Coding Standards– ASCII – EBCDIC– Unicode

• ASCII Code example– A=1000001

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The Unicode

• Replace the ASCII coding system in microcomputers

• All variations of the Latin language– English– European languages

• Chinese and Japanese• 18 Major languages

– Eg: Tamil

Page 50: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Unicode Possibilities

• It is a 16-bit code as opposed to the ASCII code that is basically an 8-bit code

• It is therefore possible to have 65,536 variations in UNICODE

Page 51: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Communication With ASCII And EBCDIC

• Latin languages can be transmitted in coded form

• Other languages– Bit-mapped image transmission– Requires considerably more bandwidth– An exception is the use of true-type

fonts to display the characters of a language not supported by ASCII

Page 52: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Communication With Unicode

• Binary encoded transmission– Latin languages– 18 major languages– Chinese, Japanese etc.

• Transmission itself requires less bandwidth

• Universal usability of software in all the supported languages

Page 53: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Unicode Advantage in WWW Transmissions

Client

TamilWeb Site

Internet Explorer Browser retrievingTamil pages on a client supporting Unicode.

Tamil pages are transmitted in their binary encoded form.

Site created using all the tools such as theMS-IIS.

Page 54: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Transmission of Tamil Pages as Images on WWW

ClientTamilWeb Site

Internet Explorer Browser retrieving Tamil pages similar to images.

Binary image transmission of Tamil pages.

Web pages scanned andstored as images.

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Using Downloaded Fonts to Host and Transmit

Tamil Pages

ClientTamilWeb Site

Internet Explorer retrieving Tamil pages.

Site createdwith tools such as MS-IIS.

Download and installthe Tamil fonts.

Binary encoded form.

Bandwidth requirements are low.

Page 56: Digitization of Audio.ppt

END OF MODULEEND OF MODULE

Page 57: Digitization of Audio.ppt

MODULE

Digitization Of Audio

Page 58: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digitization Of Audio: Overview

• Take samples of audio at pre-determined time intervals known as the sampling rate

• Represent the sampled audio with digital signals– Pulse Amplitude Modulation (PAM)

• Encode signals into binary code– Pulse Code Modulation (PCM) that

incorporates PAM as well– Required for computer processing

Page 59: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digitization of Audio: Pulse Amplitude Modulation

(PAM)Audio

9 8 7 6 7 9

Digital Signals must further be encoded into binary signals for computer processing and transmission.

Sampling Interval

Page 60: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digitization and Encoding of Audio: Pulse Code Modulation (PCM)

• PCM is a two step process• First the audio is sampled and

represented by digital signals• The digital signals are then

encoded in binary form

Page 61: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Binary Encoding of Signals in Pulse Code Modulation

(PCM)

9 8 7 6 5 6

1001 1000 0111 0110 0101 0110

The integer numbers have effectively been coded into zeros and ones. The ones and zeros now contain the audio information encoded in a form that could be processed by a computer.

PCM

Page 62: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Salient Points on the Digitization Of Audio

• Sampling rate and the number of bits used for representing the samples will determine the quality of the audio

• Quality is retained in transmission because only codes are transmitted

• Audio can be recreated to the original quality by extracting the pattern from the digital code

Page 63: Digitization of Audio.ppt

END OF MODULEEND OF MODULE

Page 64: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Effect of Sampling Frequency

• Higher sampling frequency– Smaller sampling intervals– Frequent sampling– Better quality because the audio

pattern is captured better– Higher bandwidth required for

transmission– Higher disk space required for storage

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END OF MODULEEND OF MODULE

Page 66: Digitization of Audio.ppt

MODULE

Audio Quality Vs Bandwidth in Audio Transmission

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Module Objectives

• Discuss the two important factors that influence the quality of digitized audio

• Outline the procedure for computing bandwidth requirement based on the factors mentioned above

• Present bandwidth requirements for sample audio formats

• Introduce the concept of audio streaming on the WWW

Page 68: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Factors Affecting Quality

Number of bits used for binary encoding. Example: 4 bits allow 16 amplitude variations to be represented.

9 8 7 6 7 9

Sampling Interval

Page 69: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Computation of Bandwidth Requirement for

Transmission• Problem:

– Compute the audio streaming rate for a voice grade circuit given that the number of bits used in the sampling is 8

• Background information– A voice grade circuit has a bandwidth of

approximately 4000 Hz

• General rule– For acceptable quality, the audio must be

sampled at twice the frequency of the voice grade bandwidth

Page 70: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Problem Representation

79 68 57 46 57 79

1/8000 Secondsor 2X4000 samples per second

8 bits are used enabling 256 amplitudes to represent the human voice which is considered to be adequate.

Page 71: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Bandwidth Computation

• Number of samples – 8000 per second

• Number of bits per sample– 8

• Bandwidth requirement– 8X8000 bps = 64,000 bps– Approximately 64K bps

• 64K bps is the speed of a single ISDN (B) channel

Page 72: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Examples in Audio Quality and Bandwidth

Requirement

• CD quality– 44,100 Hz, 16 bit, Stereo– 1376K bps

• Radio quality– 22,050 Hz, 8 bit, mono– 176K bps

• Telephone quality– 11,025 hz, 8bit, mono– 88K bps

Page 73: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Recording Quality and Bandwidth Requirement

Demonstration

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Recording Used in this Example

• Settings for recording– 11K Hz, 8 bit and mono

• Audio bandwidth requirement is 88K bps

• Streaming is required to send the audio alone over the Internet

• Approximate bandwidth required for both video and audio is 133K bps

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Audio Transmission In WWW

ClientReceive audio usingInternet Explorerand a plug-in to receive the audio stream.

Audio streaming requires compression.

Real-time audiobroadcast supportusing streamingserver module.

28-56K bpsWebSite

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Delivery of Instruction Over the WWW

Client

WebSite

Receive audio/video usingInternet Explorer.

Audio/Video streaming.

Store streamed audio/video using StreamCam.

28-56K bps

Page 77: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Internet Ramp Bandwidth Computation

WWW

A T1 line operating at approximately 1.354M bpscan support approximately 47 connections in theory.

In practice, 23 connections which is half of 47 can besupported with due consideration given to bandwidth bottlenecks.

Page 78: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Sampling Considerations In Communications

Sender Receiver

Digital audio transmission

Adjust quality (sampling interval and bitrepresentation) to suit bandwidth availability.

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END OF MODULEEND OF MODULE

Page 80: Digitization of Audio.ppt

MODULE

Quality Retention In Digital Transmission

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Module Objectives

• The overall purpose is to discuss the retention of audio quality under digital transmission by comparing the same under analog transmission

• Discuss briefly the transmission of audio over the WWW

• Provide a brief introduction to the role played by the Digital Signal Process or DSP in digitizing audio

Page 82: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Analog Audio Transmission

Audio Priorto Transmission

Audio withInterference

Transmission

Audio After Filtering

Page 83: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Passage of Analog Audio Over Analog Lines

AnalogAudio

AnalogSignals

AnalogSignals

AnalogAudio

Telephone

Telephone

Page 84: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Recreation of Audio from Analog Signals

• A difficult task• Complex algorithms are used to

filter noise etc. for better audio transmission

Page 85: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Signal Passage in Digital Audio Transmission

Encode

TransmitRecreate

Decode

Audio

Audio

Page 86: Digitization of Audio.ppt

A Sample Digital Audio Transmission Path

AnalogAudio

DigitalAudio

ISDNAdapter

ISDNAdapter

DigitalAudio

AnalogAudio

SoundCard

SoundCard

ISDNLines

Page 87: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Sound Generation

• Sound is recreated at destination– Using FM synthesis– Using wave table generation

• Noise is not an issue in digital transmission

Page 88: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digital Advantage in Audio Transmission

• Only codes are transmitted• Original encoding is recreated• Original audio is reproduced• Again, sampling rate and number

of bits used in each sample determine the quality

Page 89: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digitized Signal Passage Over Analog Lines

Encode

TransmitRecreate

Decode

Audio

Audio

Limited Sampling

Page 90: Digitization of Audio.ppt

A Sample Digital Audio Transmission Path

AnalogAudio

DigitalAudio

Modem

Modem

DigitalAudio

AnalogAudio

SoundCard

SoundCard

AnalogPSN

Page 91: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Audio Transmission In WWW

Client

WebSite

Receive audio usingInternet Explorerand RealAudio plug-in.

Audio stream over analog/digital line.

Real-time audiobroadcast supportusing RealAudiostreaming server module.

Page 92: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digital Signal Processor

DSP

Digital Analog

Page 93: Digitization of Audio.ppt

END OF MODULEEND OF MODULE

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MODULE

Digitization Of Image

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Module Objectives

• Give an overview of the process of digitizing an image– Black and white, gray scales, color

• Compute sample storage and bandwidth requirement for images with the following characteristics– Black and white, 16 gray scales and color

• Discuss the factors influencing bandwidth requirement in image transmission

Page 96: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digitization Of Image: Overview

PixelHorizontal Resolution

Vert

ical R

eso

luti

on

Page 97: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digitization of the Letter L

Number of bitsdetermine the amount of information that couldbe stored.

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Digitization Of Image: The Process

• Divide the image into a grid of pixels that may be considered as the sampling points of the image

• Digitize information on each pixel• Store and transmit

Page 99: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Resolution

• Horizontal resolution– Number of horizontal pixels

• Vertical resolution– Number of vertical pixels

• Image resolution– Horizontal by vertical resolution– Ex: 640 by 480

Page 100: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digitization of Black and White Image

• White– A pixel lit represents a 1

• Black– A pixel not lit represents a 0

• Storage required per pixel– 1 bit

• Storage required for 640 by 480 resolution image– 640 times 480 bits = 307,200 bits = 38.4K Bytes

Page 101: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digitization of Image Using Gray Scales

• A pixel may take a value between 0 and 15 for 16 gray scales

• A gray scale of 3 can be coded as 0011 and the others similarly using this 4 digit code

• The bandwidth requirement for the transmission of a 640X480 image in this case is as follows:– 640X480X4 = 153.5K Bytes

Page 102: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digitization of Color Image

• Image coding – Each pixel may take a value between o and

255 if 256 colors are to be represented

• Storage requirement– Digitizing of images requires substantial

number of bytes and hence large storage space for processing

• Bandwidth requirement– Higher bandwidths are required to transmit

color images

Page 103: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Bandwidth Computation for Image with 256 Colors

• Resolution is 640X480• 8 bits are required to represent

256 colors• bandwidth requirement for the

transmission of one image is as follows:– 640X480X8 = 307.2K Bytes

Page 104: Digitization of Audio.ppt

The Effect of Color Depth and Resolution

• Compare VGA and SVGA– SVGA provides higher resolution

• Practical implication– More colors less resolution– 256 colors at lower resolution– 16 colors at higher resolution

• Rule– Higher the resolution the lower the

number of colors available

Page 105: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Factors Affecting Bandwidth Requirement in

Image Transmission

• The higher the resolution, the higher the bandwidth required

• The higher the color representation, also known as color depth, higher the bandwidth requirement

• For true color, 24 bits are required to represent each pixel

• The file sizes in raw image capture can thus become very large

Page 106: Digitization of Audio.ppt

END OF MODULEEND OF MODULE

Page 107: Digitization of Audio.ppt

MODULE

Compression of Digitized Images

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Module Objectives

• Briefly outline the factors conducive to the compression of images

• List a few image compression formats• Explain image compression using a

simple example• Discussion the implication of

transferring image files over a modem connection

Page 109: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Compression of Digitized Images

• Compression is required to reduce the size of the image file

• Large blocks of unchanged data in an image (background) offers an opportunity to compress the image

• Image files are almost always compressed

Page 110: Digitization of Audio.ppt

A Few Compression Formats

• GIF• JPEG• MIC (Microsoft Image Composer)• PCD (KODAK) - Used by Corel

Page 111: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Image File Format Extensions

• File formats often represent the compression procedure being used

• Examples:– tiff– pcd– gif– pcx– bmp

Page 112: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Loss-less Compression and Others

• Some compression formats offer loss-free compression of the image

• Others sacrifice minimal loss for the sake of reduced storage and bandwidth requirements

• Fortunately, the loss is not easily detected by the naked eye

Page 113: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Image Transmission Considerations

Sender Receiver

Adjust image to suit available bandwidth.

Adjustable features are as follows.- Resolution- Color depthAdjusting the size also reduces the bandwidthrequirement because of a corresponding reductionin the number of pixels required to representthe image.

Page 114: Digitization of Audio.ppt

A Peek At Data Compression

• 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 - - - - - -0 1 1 1 1 1 11 …... 0

• THE ABOVE CAN BE COMPRESSED INTO = #9000$0#– 9000 bits are compressed into 8

characters that require approximately 64 bits for transmission

– 9000 ZEROS ARE CODED INTO #900$0#

#600$1#

INTERPRET WITHIN THE # SIGN

600

NUMBER COUNT1

CHARACTER BEINGTRANSMITTED

Page 115: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Modem Implication in Image Transmission

• Modems also compress the data stream to achieve higher transmission speeds

• Because of the fact that the images are already compressed, the full speed benefit may not be realized when images are transmitted over a modem connection

• An already compressed image file does not, for instance, offer itself well to further compression in the modem

Page 116: Digitization of Audio.ppt

END OF MODULEEND OF MODULE

Page 117: Digitization of Audio.ppt

MODULE

Digitization Of Video

Page 118: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Module Objectives

• Present the digitization of video as an extension of the digitization of image

• Give an overview of video transmission in video conferencing

• Discuss the various analog and digital lines that could be used for video conferencing

• List a few commercially available video conferencing products

Page 119: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Digitization Of Video

• Digitization of video is an extension of the process of digitizing image

• 30 frames of images per second, in general, defines continuos motion

• In communications, 25 frames per second is considered to be continuous motion

• 15 frames per second is currently used in video conferencing over digital lines for acceptable reception of video

Page 120: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Computation of Bandwidth for Raw Transmission of

Video

• Image resolution is 640X480• Number of colors is 256 (8 bit)• Acceptable reception requires 15

frames per second• Therefore, the bandwidth for the

raw transmission is as follows:– 640X480X8X15 = 36.86M bps = 4.6M

Bps

Page 121: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Compression Standards Used in the Digitization of

Video• MPEG 1 and MPEG 2• Indio• Video for Windows• QuickTime• ActiveMovie• AVI

Page 122: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Streaming Formats for Video

• Various streaming formats are supported by different vendors– RealVideo

• Microsoft’s streaming format– Active Streaming Format (ASF)

Page 123: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Overview of Video Transmission in Video

Conferencing• Acceptable speed

– 15 frames per second

• Transmission techniques– Data compression– Only changes to the frame are

transmitted

Page 124: Digitization of Audio.ppt

The Effect of Size of Window on Video

Conferencing • Minimize for maximum efficiency• Transmit less number of pixels in

minimized form

Page 125: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Communication Links for Video Conferencing

• Possible on analog lines using 28,800 bps transmission speed but not desirable

• Digital lines are preferred and the guidelines are as follows:– Possible at 128k bps using ISDN lines– Acceptable at 384k bps – 1M bps and above offer good quality

video transmission

Page 126: Digitization of Audio.ppt

Video Conferencing Products

• Intel ProShare• CU-See Me• Picturetel• C-phone• etc.

Page 127: Digitization of Audio.ppt

END OF MODULE END OF MODULE

END OF CHAPTER END OF CHAPTER