Full motion video
WiktionaryText

Noun



  1. Video of sufficient quality to make motion appear continuous to humans, considered to require at least 16 frames per second.
    • 1985, Steven Golen, C Glenn Pearce, Ross Figgins, Report writing for business and industry
      When most companies become involved in teleconferencing, usually their first interest is in full-motion video conferencing.
    • 1989, Coming for Personal Computers: Full-motion Video (in Popular Science volume 235, number 5, November 1989)
      Originally, 72 minutes of partial-screen (one-eighth) full-motion video could be stored. These pictures are fairly coarse — worse than low-quality VCR...
    • 1992, Association for Computing Machinery, Computer Graphics
      To digitize and store a 10 seconds clip of full motion video in a computer requires transfer of an enormous amount of data...
    • 2008, Mark J P Wolf, The Video Game Explosion
      In reality, multimedia was associated first and foremost with the development of full-motion video. This fascination for a cinema-like illusion of motion...
 
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