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Upconversion, upconverter, or upconverting may refer to: Scaling of a video signal to higher resolution Up- and down-conversion of analog signals (heterodyning)
An enlargement of a small section of a 1024x768 (VESA XGA) resolution image; the individual pixels are more visible in its scaled form than its normal resolution.A video scaler is a system that converts video signals from one display resolution to another; typically, scalers are used to convert a signal from a lower resolution (such as 480p standard definition) to a higher resolution (such as ...
In digital signal processing, upsampling, expansion, and interpolation are terms associated with the process of resampling in a multi-rate digital signal processing system. ...
Handel-C from Celoxica (defunct) DIME-C from Nallatech; Impulse C from Impulse Accelerated Technologies; Instant-SoC from FPGA-Cores; FpgaC which is an open source initiative; SA-C programming language; Cascade (C to RTL synthesizer) from CriticalBlue; Mitrion-C from Mitrionics; SPARK (a C-to-VHDL) from University of California, San Diego [4]
Sample-rate conversion, sampling-frequency conversion or resampling is the process of changing the sampling rate or sampling frequency of a discrete signal to obtain a new discrete representation of the underlying continuous signal. [1]
The second stage is an image upscaling step which uses the single raw, low-resolution frame to upscale the image to the desired output resolution. Using just a single frame for upscaling means the neural network itself must generate a large amount of new information to produce the high resolution output, this can result in slight hallucinations ...
DCDi by Faroudja (directional correlational de-interlacing) technology [7] is an advanced deinterlacing algorithm for upconverting and deinterlacing standard definition NTSC content for display on high-definition flat panel TVs. DCDi by Faroudja corrects several deinterlacing issues, including visible jagged edges in an image, cross-color ...
The ANSI standard was completed in 1989 and ratified as ANSI X3.159-1989 "Programming Language C." This version of the language is often referred to as "ANSI C". Later on sometimes the label "C89" is used to distinguish it from C90 but using the same labeling method.