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  2. ATSC standards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATSC_standards

    ATSC Standard A/53, which implemented the system developed by the Grand Alliance, was published in 1995; the standard was adopted by the Federal Communications Commission in the United States in 1996. It was revised in 2009. ATSC Standard A/72 was approved in 2008 and introduces H.264/AVC video coding to the ATSC system.

  3. Standard-definition television - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard-definition_television

    Standard-definition television (SDTV; also standard definition or SD) is a television system that uses a resolution that is not considered to be either high or enhanced definition. [1] Standard refers to offering a similar resolution to the analog broadcast systems used when it was introduced.

  4. List of ATSC standards - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ATSC_standards

    A third entry from DTS named DTS:X (a successor to DTS-HD) was withdrawn before the standard was upgraded to candidate status. [4] On September 8, 2016, the Physical Layer Download component of ATSC 3.0 was upgraded from candidate standard to finalized standard. [5]

  5. ISDB - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ISDB

    This broadcast standard is also much like another digital radio system, Eureka 147, which calls each group of stations on a transmitter an ensemble; this is very much like the multi-channel digital TV standard DVB-T. ISDB-T operates on unused TV channels, an approach that was taken by other countries for TV but never before for radio.

  6. ATSC tuner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ATSC_tuner

    However, now "virtual channel" (technically known as logical channel number) numbers are common. So, Channel 4 digital signals may now actually be broadcast on channel 43, or any other frequency. When the ATSC tuner does a channel scan, it finds the signal on channel 43, learns that this material is called "Channel 4", and remembers that mapping.

  7. QAM (television) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/QAM_(television)

    QAM is a digital television standard using quadrature amplitude modulation. It is the format by which digital cable channels are encoded and transmitted via cable television providers. QAM is used in a variety of communications systems such as Dial-up modems and WiFi.

  8. NTSC - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NTSC

    In particular, the Japanese VHF band runs from channels 1–12 (located on frequencies directly above the 76–90 MHz Japanese FM radio band) while the North American VHF TV band uses channels 2–13 (54–72 MHz, 76–88 MHz and 174–216 MHz) with 88–108 MHz allocated to FM radio broadcasting.

  9. List of digital television deployments by country - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_digital_television...

    While the Japanese ISDB-T standard was adopted for terrestrial digital TV transmission, digital cable and satellite TV providers in the Philippines such as SkyCable and Cignal use the European DVB system for service distribution to carry some channels based in Europe, Taiwan, Malaysia, and Singapore (which are using DVB) through country ...