Glossary of DVD Terms

S


S/N
Signal-to-noise ratio. Also called SNR.

S/P DIF
Sony/Philips digital interface. A consumer version of the AES/EBU digital audio transmission standard. Most DVD players include S/P DIF coaxial digital audio connectors providing PCM and encoded digital audio output.

sample rate
The number of times a digital sample is taken, measured in samples per second, or Hertz. The more often samples are taken, the better a digital signal can represent the original analog signal. Sampling theory states that the sampling frequency must be more than twice the signal frequency in order to reproduce the signal without aliasing. DVD PCM audio allows sampling rates of 48 and 96 kHz.

sample size
The number of bits used to store a sample. Also called resolution. In general, the more bits allocated per sample, the better the reproduction of the original analog information. Audio sample size determines the dynamic range. DVD PCM audio uses sample sizes of 16, 20, or 24 bits.

sample
A single digital measurement of analog information. A snapshot in time of a continuous analog waveform. See sampling.

sampling
Converting analog information into a digital representation by measuring the value of the analog signal at regular intervals, called samples, and encoding these numerical values in digital form. Sampling is often based on specified quantization levels. Sampling may also be used to adjust for differences between different digital systems (see resampling and subsampling).

saturation
The intensity or vividness of a color.

scaling
Altering the spatial resolution of a single image to increase or reduce the size; or altering the temporal resolution of an image sequence to increase or decrease the rate of display. Techniques include decimation, interpolation, motion compensation, replication, resampling, and subsampling. Most scaling methods introduce artifacts.

scan line
A single horizontal line traced out by the scanning system of a video display unit. 525/60 (NTSC) video has 525 scan lines, about 480 of which contain actual picture. 625/50 (PAL/SECAM) video has 625 scan lines, about 576 of which contain actual picture.

scanning velocity
The speed at which the laser pickup head travels along the spiral track of a disc.

SCMS
Serial copy management system. Used by DAT, MiniDisc, and other digital recording systems to control copying and limit the number of copies that can be made from copies.

SCSI
Small Computer Systems Interface. An electronic interface and command set for attaching and controlling internal or external peripherals, such as a DVD-ROM drive, to a computer. The command set of SCSI was extended for DVD-ROM devices by the SFF 8090 specification.

SDDI
Serial Digital Data Interface. A digital video interconnect designed for serial digital information to be carried over a standard SDI connection.

SDDS
Sony Dynamic Digital Sound. A perceptual audio-coding system developed by Sony for multichannel audio in theaters. A competitor to Dolby Digital and an optional audio track format for DVD.

SDI
See Serial Digital Interface. Also Strategic Defense Initiative, a.k.a. Star Wars, which as of 2000 was still not available on DVD other than as bootleg copies.

SDMI
Secure Digital Music Initiative. Efforts and specifications for protecting digital music.

SDTV
Standard-definition television. A term applied to traditional 4:3 television (in digital or analog form) with a resolution of about 700x480 (about 1/3 megapixel). Contrast with HDTV.

seamless playback
A feature of DVD-Video where a program can jump from place to place on the disc without any interruption of the video. Allows different versions of a program to be put on a single disc by sharing common parts.

SECAM
Séquential Couleur Avec Mémoire/Sequential Color with Memory. A composite color standard similar to PAL, but currently used only as a transmission standard in France and a few other countries. Video is produced using the 625/50 PAL standard and is then transcoded to SECAM by the player or transmitter.

sector
A logical or physical group of bytes recorded on the disc-the smallest addressable unit. A DVD sector contains 38,688 bits of channel data and 2048 bytes of user data.

Sector information
Header field providing the sector number.

Sector number
A number that uniquely identifies the physical sector on a disc.

seek time
The time it takes for the head in a drive to move to a data track.

Serial Digital Interface (SDI)
The professional digital video connection format using a 270 Mbps transfer rate. A 10-bit, scrambled, polarity-independent interface, with common scrambling for both component ITU-R 601 and composite digital video and four groups each of four channels of embedded digital audio. SDI uses standard 75-ohm BNC connectors and coax cable.

SFF 8090
Specification number 8090 of the Small Form Factor Committee, an ad hoc group formed to promptly address disk industry needs and to develop recommendations to be passed on to standards organizations. SFF 8090 (also known as the Mt. Fuji specification), defines a command set for CD-ROM- and DVD-ROM-type devices, including implementation notes for ATAPI and SCSI.

SI
Système International (d'Unités)/International System (of Units). A complete system of standardized units and prefixes for fundamental quantities of length, time, volume, mass, and so on.

signal-to-noise ratio
The ratio of pure signal to extraneous noise, such as tape hiss or video interference. Signal-to-noise ratio is measured in decibels (dB). Analog recordings almost always have noise. Digital recordings, when properly pre-filtered and not compressed, have no noise.

simple profile (SP)
A subset of the syntax of the MPEG-2 video standard designed for simple and inexpensive applications such as software. SP does not allow B pictures. See profile.

simulate
To test the function of a DVD disc in the authoring system, without actually formatting an image.

SMPTE
The Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers. An international research and standards organization. The SMPTE time code, used for marking the position of audio or video in time, was developed by this group.

son
The metal disc produced from a mother disc in the replication process. Fathers or sons are used in molds to stamp discs.

SP@ML
Simple profile at main level. The simplest MPEG-2 format used by DVD. Most discs use MP@ML. SP does not allow B pictures.

space
The reflective area of a writable optical disc. Equivalent to a land.

spatial resolution
The clarity of a single image or the measure of detail in an image. See resolution.

spatial
Relating to space, usually two-dimensional. Video can be defined by its spatial characteristics (information from the horizontal plane and vertical plane) and its temporal characteristics (information at different instances in time).

squeezed video
See anamorphic.

stamping
The process of replicating optical discs by injecting liquid plastic into a mold containing a stamper (father or son). Also (inaccurately) called mastering.

STP
Surface transfer process. A method of producing dual-layer DVDs that sputters the reflective (aluminum) layer onto a temporary substrate of PMMA, then transfers the metalized layer to the already-molded layer 0.

stream
A continuous flow of data, usually digitally encoded, designed to be processed sequentially. Also called a bitstream.

Subpicture Menu
Menu used to select a subpicture stream

subpicture
Graphic bitmap overlays used in DVD-Video to create subtitles, captions, karaoke lyrics, menu highlighting effects, and so on.

subsampling
The process of reducing spatial resolution by taking samples that cover larger areas than the original samples or of reducing temporal resolutions by taking samples that cover more time than the original samples. See chroma subsampling. Also called downsampling.

substrate
The clear polycarbonate disc onto which data layers are stamped or deposited.

subtitle
A textual representation of the spoken audio in a video program. Subtitles are often used with foreign languages and do not serve the same purpose as captions for the hearing impaired. See subpicture.

surround sound
A multichannel audio system with speakers in front of and behind the listener to create a surrounding envelope of sound and to simulate directional audio sources.

SVCD
Super Video Compact Disc. MPEG-2 video on CD. Used primarily in Asia.

SVGA
A video graphics resolution of 800x600 pixels.

S-VHS
Super VHS (Video Home System). An enhancement of the VHS videotape standard using better recording techniques and Y/C signals. The term S-VHS is often used incorrectly to refer to s-video signals and connectors.

s-video
A video interface standard that carries separate luma and chroma signals, usually on a four-pin mini-DIN connector. Also called Y/C. The quality of s-video is significantly better than composite video since it does not require a comb filter to separate the signals, but it's not quite as good as component video. Most high-end televisions have s-video inputs. S-video is often erroneously called S-VHS.

SXGA
A video graphics resolution of 1280x1024 pixels.

Sync frame
Physical record unit of 1488 channel bits length comprising data (91 bytes) and a SYNC code. One physical sector consists of 26 sync frames.

sync
A video signal (or component of a video signal) containing information necessary to synchronize the picture horizontally and vertically. Also, specially formatted data on disc which helps the readout system identify location and specific data structures.

syntax
The rules governing construction or formation of an orderly system of information. For example, the syntax of the MPEG video encoding specification defines how data and associated instructions are used by a decoder to create video pictures.

system menu
The main menu of a DVD-Video disc, from which titles are selected. Also called the title selection menu or disc menu.

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