Encyclo - De online Nederlandstalige encyclopedie뮠in 驮 oogopslag
Encyclopedia Sources Categories About Encyclo      Enzyklopädie-DE Encyclopedie-NL
A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Index
Agriculture and Industry
Animals and Nature
Architecture and Buildings
Arts
Business and Law
Earth and Environment
Economy and Finance
Education
Electronics and Engineering
Film and Animation
Food and Drink
General
General technical and industrial
Government and organisations
Health and Medicine
History and Culture
Hobbies and Crafts
Language and Literature
Legal
Management
Mathematics and statistics
Meteorology and astronomy
Military and Defence
Music and Sound
People and society
Sciences
Sport and Leisure
Technical and IT
Travel and Transportation

Look up: Secam

  1. SECAM
    Sequential Couleur Avec Memoire, sequential colour with memory. A colour television system with 625 lines per frame (used to be 819) and 50 fields per second developed by France and the former U.S.S.R. Colour difference information is transmitted sequentially on alternate lines as an FM signal.
    Found on http://www.zoo.co.uk/~z0001325/Glossary.

  2. SECAM
    The French broadcast system. Sequential Coleur A Memoire uses 625 lines scanned at 50Hz.
    Found on http://www.panasonic.co.uk/html/en_GB/Te

  3. SECAM
    Sequentiel Couleur Avec Memoire (Sequential Color With Memory)
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/visitor-contrib

  4. SECAM
    (Digital cameras and photo printers) Sequential Couleur Avec Memoire. French television standard. Also used in former Eastern Bloc countries. (PAL, NTSC)
    Found on http://www.olympus.co.uk/consumer/208_10

  5. SECAM
    Defines the encoding of colour video signals used mainly in France and Eastern Europe e.g. Russia, Hungary etc. Very similar in structure to the PAL system but uses different chroma modulation technique.
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20482

  6. SECAM
    A television standard for video and broadcasting. Used mainly in France and the former East Bloc countries. Higher resolution than NTSC. It is incompatible with other television standards.
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/local/20523

  7. SECAM
    Sequentiel Coleur a Memoir - The television system used primarily in France.
    Found on http://www.encyclo.co.uk/visitor-contrib

  8. SECAM
    International technical broadcast standard for analogue TV transmissions that is employed in France and some other countries.
    Found on http://www.agbnielsen.net/glossary/gloss

  9. Secam
    The TV standard used in France, slightly better than PAL.
    Found on http://www.amigahistory.co.uk/s.html

  10. SECAM
    Sequential Couleur A Memoire (sequential memory recreation of colours). Television standard used among others in France, Czech Republic, Slowakia and Japan. Like PAL, the number of lines is 625, the frame rate is 25 frames.
    Found on http://www.medium.co.uk/public/sales/glo

  11. SECAM
    (Sequential Couleur avec M
    Found on http://www.glossarycentral.com/plasma/se

  12. SECAM
    SÉquentiel Couleur À Mémoire. Colour television system, based on 625 scanning lines, 25 frames/second, 4:3 aspect ratio, but differing from PAL; used in France, some African countries and the countries of the former Soviet Union.
    Found on http://www.transedit.se/glossary.htm

  13. SECAM
    Séquential Couleur Avec Mémoire/Sequential Color with Memory. A composite color standard similar to PAL (image format 4:3, 625 lines, 50 Hz and 6 Mhz video bandwidth), but currently used only as a transmission standard in France and a few other countries. Video is produced using the 625/50 PAL sta...
    Found on http://www.videohelp.com/glossary?S

  14. SECAM
    `SECAM`, also written `SÉCAM` (Séquentiel couleur `à` mémoire, French for "Sequential Color with Memory"), is an analog color television system first used in France. A team led by Henri de France working at Compagnie Française de Télévision (later bought by Tho...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SECAM



...

11 February 2012

This day in history:
On 11th February, 1858, a 14 year old French peasant girl, Bernadette Soubirous claimed to have seen visions of the Virgin Mary at her native Lourdes. She also revealed that the waters of a spring near a grotto in Lourdes had been given healing powers by the Virgin. Eventually, the Roman Catholic church decided that the visions were authentic. Franz Werfel wrote the novel, Song of Bernadette, based on the story of Bernadette's visions. read more

Encyclo in your browser

Encyclo in the search bar of your browser? Click for more info! Would you like to use Encyco more often? Add an (extra) search option to the search field of your browser. Installed in 3 seconds, easy to remove.
More info

Statistics

Encyclo has been online since october 15th 2007. It currently contains 3,485,243 words from 1122 sources. The words are listed in 32 categories.

Search

Type a word and press the `Search` button.

Recent searches

The most recent searches on Encyclo. Between brackets you will find the number of results and number of related results.
shama (6/25)
PILAF (3/1)
bitok (2/0)
phreatic (7/10)
Ka-Ks (25/0)
Gordius (8/0)
Akbar (5/25)
Ae (16/25)
Agudat (2/4)
monty (6/25)
Octavius (7/15)
dylan (8/25)
cabaletta (3/1)
Labiatae (2/0)
tease (15/25)
Alexander (2/25)
Adoration (2/9)
MNP (6/3)
VA-78 (2/0)
Blackmoor (4/3)
fungiform (6/8)
NACoA (2/0)
Layland (2/2)
Nose (2/25)

© Encyclo MMXI
Contact Privacy