Weitere Beispiele werden automatisch zu den Stichwörtern zugeordnet - wir garantieren ihre Korrektheit nicht.
With Digital Video Interactive, a single compact disk can hold 72 minutes of pictures and sound.
Intel recently acquired the Digital Video Interactive technology from the General Electric Company.
This latter problem is now being addressed by compression-decompression techniques, the most important of which is Digital Video Interactive (DVI).
We have already referred in some detail to Digital Video Interactive (DVI) above and in the section dealing with video compression (3.10).
The technology, known as Digital Video Interactive, or D.V.I., allows a compact disk to store one hour of video that can be displayed on a computer screen.
DVI (Digital Video Interactive) is a compression technique that stored 72 minutes of full-screen video on a CD-ROM.
The American microchip giant Intel has developed Digital Video Interactive (DVI) which enables a suitably equipped desktop computer to display full motion digital video.
Digital Video Interactive, or DVI, developed by the David Sarnoff Research Center in Princeton, N.J., is perhaps the most efficient way of storing video images on compact discs.
So, you put your feet up and watch the video, wondering how anyone figured out how to use a computer before the Intel Corporation and Digital Video Interactive, or DVI, got together back in 1988.
The process, called Digital Video Interactive (DVI), was invented in the late 1980s in the RCA Laboratories of the David Sarnoff Research Centre, Princeton, New Jersey.
The technology, known as Digital Video Interactive, allows video images to be compressed and reconstructed on a computer screen quickly and might first be used on CD-ROM's, which are compact disks used to store computer data.
The Intel Corporation said today that it had reached an agreement with the International Business Machines Corporation to develop circuit-board products that will bring Intel's Digital Video Interactive technology to the I.B.M. Personal System/2 computers.
He was part of the original team at Sarnoff that developed Digital Video Interactive, the first PC digital video system, and at Intel he was a member of the group that developed Indeo, another video compression standard.
Digital Video Interactive (DVI) was the first multimedia desktop video standard for IBM-compatible personal computers, developed around 1984 by Section 17 of The David Sarnoff Research Center Labs (DSRC) then a division of RCA.
Intel is also developing a software version of Digital Video Interactive and working with Microsoft Corp to build support for it into Microsoft's Audio Visual Interleave software, which Microsoft plans to announce at Comdex/Fall next month in a package called Video for Windows.