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English
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Advanced Digital Video Part 3)
Q-SYS Quantum Level 1 Training (Online) : Advanced Digital Video
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CERTIFICATION STEPS COMPLETED
Certification Steps Completed
1 ) Best Practices in Gain Structure
21m 15s
Best Practices in Q-SYS Gain Structure (Part 1)
5m 10s
Best Practices in Q-SYS Gain Structure (Part 2)
5m 7s
Best Practices in Q-SYS Gain Structure (Part 3)
5m 10s
Best Practices in Q-SYS Gain Structure (Part 4)
5m 48s
Assessment
2 ) AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System
28m 8s
AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System (Part 1)
6m 13s
AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System (Part 2)
6m 25s
AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System (Part 3)
5m 26s
AEC & Q-SYS Conferencing System (Part 4)
10m 4s
Assessment
3 ) Advanced Digital Video
27m 23s
Advanced Digital Video (Part 1)
5m 17s
Advanced Digital Video (Part 2)
9m 56s
Advanced Digital Video Part 3)
5m 6s
Advanced Digital Video (Part 4)
7m 4s
Assessment
4 ) VOIP Telephony
24m 23s
Intro to VoIP Telephony (Part 1)
7m 19s
Intro to VoIP Telephony (Part 2)
7m 2s
Intro to VoIP Telephony (Part 3)
6m 43s
Intro to VoIP Telephony (Part 4)
3m 19s
Assessment
5 ) Analog Telephony (POTS)
21m 32s
Analog Telephony (Part 1)
8m 16s
Analog Telephony (Part 2)
7m 3s
Analog Telephony (Part 3)
6m 13s
Assessment
6 ) Q-SYS Networking I
40m 20s
Quantum Networking (Part 1)
9m 13s
Quantum Networking (Part 2)
7m 2s
Quantum Networking (Part 3)
10m 23s
Quantum Networking (Part 4)
6m 10s
Quantum Networking (Part 5)
7m 32s
Assessment
7 ) Introduction to Q-SYS Control
34m 56s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 1)
6m 23s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 2)
4m 25s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 3)
10m 45s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 4)
6m 40s
Introduction to Q-SYS Control (Part 5)
6m 43s
Assessment
8 ) Q-SYS Networking II
46m 6s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 1)
7m 48s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 2)
4m 6s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 3)
8m 20s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 4)
9m 51s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 5)
8m 49s
Q-SYS Networking and Topologies (Part 6)
7m 12s
Assessment
9 ) SIP Telephony
46m 22s
Basic SIP Telephony
19m 56s
Advanced SIP Features
9m 14s
SIP Registration with Avaya
7m 7s
Advanced SIP Registration for CUCM
5m 31s
SIP Trunking with CUCM
4m 34s
Assessment
10 ) Control Troubleshooting
9m 52s
Troubleshooting Control Programming
9m 52s
Assessment
Video Transcript
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Video Transcript
Advanced Digital Video Part 3)
5m 6s
00:07
Welcome back.
00:08
We’ll turn on the Wayback Machine and go all the way back to analog video.
00:13
In an analog video image, you have different portions of video: active, sync, front porch and back porch.
00:22
Most importantly, the pulse sync is a feature that is used to keep the synchronization.
00:27
Video receivers and displays look for the sync pulse by detecting the leading edge of the pulse.
00:33
For analog video, CRT screens used a method called raster scanning,
00:38
which could scan from the top to bottom and back, up.
00:42
As it did this, the scan rate would create horizontal and vertical frequencies associated with the on-screen image.
00:49
Today we use these concepts but we also insert important information,
00:53
like audio and ancillary data during those blanking periods.
00:58
Here’s what a blanking period and active portion look like today.
01:02
That is all we care about right now.
01:04
Video data includes both the visual (or active) portion and the non-visual (or the blanking) portion.
01:11
There is both horizontal (H) and vertical portions (V) of data and we can determine the total,
01:17
active and blanking portions of both the horizontal and vertical using these equations below.
01:24
(Don’t worry, these won’t be on the test, just good information to know.)
01:28
TMDS (or for Transition Minimized Differential Signaling) carries the actual video, audio and infoframe data.
01:37
TMDS encodes the data using an eight to ten bit encoding algorithm,
01:43
so every eight bits of data we send ten bits (There's a little bit of overhead of 2 bits for every 10 bits sent.)
01:51
There are three channels (0, 1 and 2) used to send the TMDS data which aligns with R, G and B or Y, Cb and Cr.
02:02
The TMDS clock keeps everything in sync as it is sent across the wire.
02:07
Recall that we are still following what we did with analog video. There is an active region and a blanking region.
02:13
The active video Data region is the pixel data that is to be displayed on the sink.
02:18
The blanking region is used for control of the synchronization of the data between the horizontal and the vertical sync pulses.
02:25
Additionally in the blanking region there are Data Islands which contain either audio or infoframes.
02:32
By making use of essentially empty data
02:35
we are able to pack in audio and details about the video data being sent.
02:39
Both audio data and infoframes are sent during the horizontal and vertical blanking periods.
02:45
Audio data contains the audio packets, that is considered embedded audio.
02:50
There are a few different kinds of infoframes
02:53
but the one we're really concerned about is the AVI or the Auxiliary Video Information.
03:00
Similar to EDID the AVI infoframe provides the timing details.
03:05
However, this information is specific to the video and audio data being sent,
03:10
unlike EDID that provides multiple timings for ranges of values capable by the sink.
03:16
Here is a visual example of how the data is packed.
03:19
The visual portion is the darker gray area
03:22
and the data island containing audio and infoframes is the blue portion.
03:27
You can see those are placed in the blanking portion.
03:30
Let’s talk about DisplayPort!
03:33
DisplayPort was designed to be backwards-compatible with HDMI, DVI, and VGA,
03:38
supporting next-generation displays
03:41
while maintaining the compatibility with existing analog and digital displays.
03:46
Dual-mode DisplayPort interfaces are designed to transmit a single DVI or HDMI protocol
03:53
across the interface through the use of an adapter.
03:55
When it comes to the Q-SYS NV Series,
03:58
here’s a list of common resolutions and corresponding frame rates on the HDMI inputs.
04:04
NV Series can also scale to these resolutions and frame rates on the HDMI outputs.
04:09
That's right, you heard correctly, there are robust scalers built into every HDMI output in the NV Series.
04:17
For audio, the NV Series supports multiple input scaling frame rates and outputs them to 48 kHz.
04:25
Every HDMI input is capable of receiving and de-embedding 8 channels of LPCM audio
04:32
and every HDMI output is capable of sending and embedding audio up to 8 channels of LPCM.
04:40
And of course, all of that audio is fully Q-SYS routable, which means you can route to external loudspeakers,
04:46
or if you really want to get tricky
04:49
you can use a PA router to send pages directly to the display’s onboard loudspeakers.
04:54
Alright, we’re in the home stretch.
04:56
When you get back, we're gonna wrap up with a discussion of our video codec, Q-SYS Shift.
05:01
We'll see you in a bit.
Downloads and Links
Advanced Digital Video Part 3)
5m 6s
Click here to download "Advanced Digital Video (Part 3)" video
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