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Introduction to Visual Communication. Television. Television. Like film – television is actually a series of still images presented to the eye in rapid succession Earliest experiments in 1890s Italian monk – Casselli Pictures by wire. Television. Mechanical Television
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Introduction to Visual Communication Television
Television • Like film – television is actually a series of still images presented to the eye in rapid succession • Earliest experiments in 1890s • Italian monk – Casselli • Pictures by wire
Television • Mechanical Television • Paul Nipkow – scanning disk • Nipkow disk • John Loge Baird • Scottish inventor working with BBC • Launched the first system based on mechanical scanning
Television • Electronic television – cathode ray tube • Vladimir Zworykin • Iconoscope • Philo T. Farnsworth • Image Dissector
Electron stream Electromagnetic yoke Filament Electron cloud
White light Beam splitter
Television standards • National Television Standard Commission (NTSC) • Standard Definition (SDTV) • 4:3 aspect ratio • 525 lines of horizontal resolution • 30 frames per second • 60 fields per second • 2 fields per frame • Interlace scanning
Television standards • High definition (HDTV) • 16:9 aspect ratio • 1080 lines of horizontal resolution • 30 frames per second • Progressive scanning
Television production • Originally all television was live – except for films which were shown on TV • Multiple cameras were connected to a switcher • Camera shots were selected in real time and sent out over the air
Transmitter Switcher
Videotape • Ampex corporation invented the videotape recorder • Allowed television programs to be recorded and “mistakes” could be corrected
Switcher VTR Live on Tape
VTR VTR VTR Isolated Camera
Film Style • Single camera production • One camera – film or video • Each shot is recorded individually • Entire program is assembled in post production through editing • Most hour-long dramas and some sit-coms
Forcing perspective • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TY_QVS0hE8g&feature=related