enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Color Television Inc. - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_Television_Inc.

    Color Television Inc. was an American research and development firm founded in 1947 and devoted to creating a color television system to be approved by the Federal Communications Commission as the U.S. color broadcasting standard. Its system was one of three considered in a series of FCC hearings from September 1949 to May 1950.

  3. Aras Corp - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aras_Corp

    Aras Corporation is an American developer and publisher of product development software, Aras Innovator. [1] The product is used for product lifecycle management (PLM) and other purposes. [ 1 ] Since 2007, Aras has been providing Aras Innovator for free as " Enterprise open-source software ", with Aras Corp providing technical support ...

  4. Colorburst - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colorburst

    Colorburst is an analog and composite video signal generated by a video-signal generator used to keep the chrominance subcarrier synchronized in a color television signal. By synchronizing an oscillator with the colorburst at the back porch (beginning) of each scan line , a television receiver is able to restore the suppressed carrier of the ...

  5. Color television - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Color_television

    The invention of color television standards was an important part of the history and technology of television. Transmission of color images using mechanical scanners had been conceived as early as the 1880s. A demonstration of mechanically scanned color television was given by John Logie Baird in 1928, but its limitations were apparent even ...

  6. Introduction of color television in countries by decade. This is a list of when the first color television broadcasts were transmitted to the general public. Non-public field tests, closed-circuit demonstrations and broadcasts available from other countries are not included, while including dates when the last black-and-white stations in the country switched to color or shutdown all black-and ...

  7. Amiga productivity software - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amiga_productivity_software

    While desktop video proved to be a major market for the Amiga, a surge of word processing, page layout and graphic software filled out the professional needs starting from the first Amiga text program, Textcraft, which was a mix between a real word processor and an advanced text editor, capable of changing page layouts, fonts, enlarging or ...

  8. Colorplexer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Colorplexer

    Colorplexer (a portmanteau of "color" and "multiplexer") was the RCA trade name for its complex electronic device which encoded discrete red, green and blue 3-color images, as from a color camera, into a composite monochrome-compatible color information stream.

  9. CTIA and GTIA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CTIA_and_GTIA

    Atari had built their first display driver chip, the Television Interface Adaptor but universally referred to as the TIA, as part of the Atari 2600 console. [8] The TIA display logically consisted of two primary sets of objects, the "players" and "missiles" that represented moving objects, and the "playfield" which represented the static background image on which the action took place.