enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Video recorder scheduling code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_recorder_scheduling_code

    The actual algorithms used to encode and decode the television guide values from and to their time representations were published in 1992, but only for six-digit codes or less. [1] [2] Source code for seven and eight digit codes was written in C and Perl and posted anonymously in 2003. [3]

  3. Apache Airflow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Airflow

    Airflow is written in Python, and workflows are created via Python scripts. Airflow is designed under the principle of "configuration as code". While other "configuration as code" workflow platforms exist using markup languages like XML, using Python allows developers to import libraries and classes to help them create their workflows.

  4. SimpleScreenRecorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SimpleScreenRecorder

    SimpleScreenRecorder can capture a video and audio recording of the entire computer screen or part of it [4] or record OpenGL applications directly. The program reduces the frame rate of the video if the computer its running on is too slow.

  5. Timecode - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timecode

    In video production and filmmaking, SMPTE timecode is used extensively for synchronization, and for logging and identifying material in recorded media.During filmmaking or video production shoot, the camera assistant will typically log the start and end timecodes of shots, and the data generated will be sent on to the editorial department for use in referencing those shots.

  6. Talk:Video recorder scheduling code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Video_recorder...

    The 9-digit codes prefixed the 8-digit codes with a numeric offset (up to 8 digit codes were accurate only to 5-minute intervals, 9-digit added on the minute offset 1-4). There were different algorithms - subtly different - for VCR Plus, ShowView and VideoPlus.

  7. Interval scheduling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interval_scheduling

    Interval scheduling is a class of problems in computer science, particularly in the area of algorithm design. The problems consider a set of tasks. Each task is represented by an interval describing the time in which it needs to be processed by some machine (or, equivalently, scheduled on some resource).

  8. Longest-processing-time-first scheduling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longest-processing-time...

    Schedule each job in this sequence into a machine in which the current load (= total processing-time of scheduled jobs) is smallest. Step 2 of the algorithm is essentially the list-scheduling (LS) algorithm. The difference is that LS loops over the jobs in an arbitrary order, while LPT pre-orders them by descending processing time.

  9. Rate-monotonic scheduling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rate-monotonic_scheduling

    In computer science, rate-monotonic scheduling (RMS) [1] is a priority assignment algorithm used in real-time operating systems (RTOS) with a static-priority scheduling class. [2] The static priorities are assigned according to the cycle duration of the job, so a shorter cycle duration results in a higher job priority.