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The first color NTSC television camera was the RCA TK-40, used for experimental broadcasts in 1953; an improved version, the TK-40A, introduced in March 1954, was the first commercially available color television camera. Later that year, the improved TK-41 became the standard camera used throughout much of the 1960s.
Television standards conversion is the process of changing a television transmission or recording from one video system to another. Converting video between different numbers of lines, frame rates, and color models in video pictures is a complex technical problem.
Use of RSC bypasses the generation of the artefacts that would be introduced in a normal NTSC-to-PAL conversion, and actually reverses the early standards conversion method used to create the NTSC copies. RSC is the result of reverse engineering the method of conversion inherent in the old traditional BBC PAL to NTSC converter.
Analog television system by nation Analog color television encoding standards by nation. Every analog television system bar one began as a black-and-white system. Each country, faced with local political, technical, and economic issues, adopted a color television standard which was grafted onto an existing monochrome system such as CCIR System M, using gaps in the video spectrum (explained ...
It is largely a replacement for the analog NTSC standard — like that standard — is used mostly in the United States, Mexico, Canada, South Korea, Trinidad and Tobago. Several former NTSC users like Japan , have not used ATSC during their digital television transition , because they adopted other systems like ISDB developed by Japan and DVB ...
NTSC-J or "System J" is the informal designation for the analogue television standard used in Japan. The system is based on the US NTSC standard with minor differences. [1] While NTSC-M is an official CCIR [2] [3] [4] and FCC [5] [6] [7] standard, NTSC-J or "System J" are a colloquial indicators.
In Japan, the term is associated with improvements to analog NTSC called EDTV-I (or "Clear-vision") and EDTV-II (or "Wide-aspect Clear-vision") including ghost cancellation, digital sound or widescreen broadcasts, using a methods vaguely similar to PALPlus. [4] [5] [6] In Europe, it can be applied to analog PALPlus or MAC broadcasts. [7]
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