Tagged with sampling - Personal View Talks http://personal-view.com/talks/discussions/tagged/sampling/feed.rss Thu, 02 May 24 05:09:07 +0000 Tagged with sampling - Personal View Talks en-CA Sensor resolution vs nyquist sampling theorem http://personal-view.com/talks/discussion/22501/sensor-resolution-vs-nyquist-sampling-theorem Thu, 29 Aug 2019 13:29:07 +0000 EspenB 22501@/talks/discussions So, if I want to sample audio everybody knows that f = 0,5 fs. So to sample 20 kHz I need >40 kHz sampling frequency.

So if I have a camera system of i.e. HD resolution of 1920 x 1080 pixels the actuall resolution of this sample raster is only 960 X 540 pixels.

Yes or no? Actually somewhere in between?

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Audio sampling, 44Khz is enough http://personal-view.com/talks/discussion/7723/audio-sampling-44khz-is-enough Thu, 08 Aug 2013 08:26:14 +0000 Vitaliy_Kiselev 7723@/talks/discussions

According to a remarkable new study, however, the failure of new audio formats — at least the ones that claim superiority thanks to higher sample rates — to succeed commercially may in reality be meaningless. The study basically says that (with apologies to Firesign Theatre) everything you, I, Moorer and everyone else know about how much better high-sample-rate audio sounds is wrong.

The study was published in Journal of the Audio Engineering Society under the title “Audibility of a CD-Standard A/D/A Loop Inserted Into High-Resolution Audio Playback.” The study blew me away for a number of reasons. One is that it was almost identical to a study I proposed some years ago at the school where I was teaching, but it never got past the proposal stage. Second, the two authors of the study, David Moran and Brad Meyer, happen to be people whom I've known for several decades (we were all part of the crew covering audio and other technologies at The Boston Phoenix when I was starting out as a writer), but I had little idea what they were up to these days.

The main reason it knocked the wind out of me was its conclusions. It was designed to show whether real people, with good ears, can hear any differences between “high-resolution” audio and the 44.1kHz/16-bit CD standard. And the answer Moran and Meyer came up with, after hundreds of trials with dozens of subjects using four different top-tier systems playing a wide variety of music, is, “No, they can't.”

Via:http://mixonline.com/recording/mixing/audio_emperors_new_sampling/

Check full paper http://www.drewdaniels.com/audible.pdf

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4:2:2 color sampling for GH13 in AVCHD 1080p 23.97fps http://personal-view.com/talks/discussion/1423/422-color-sampling-for-gh13-in-avchd-1080p-23.97fps Fri, 11 Nov 2011 14:27:02 +0000 kronstadt 1423@/talks/discussions I'm wondering about the roadmap of future developments for the GH13 hack. I'm a relative newbie, so if this question sounds stupid, just say so.

I noticed that for MPEG there's a checkbox for 4:2:2 color sampling. And MPEG videos (with Powell's 100mbps and with Blackout-Powell's patch) do look somewhat richer in color. The trouble is that MPEG does not come in 1080p 23.976fps.

So I'm wondering, Vitaliy, do you plan to introduce 4:2:2 color sampling also for AVCHD in 1080p24 ??? (would be awesome to have this)]]>