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Unit 6: Hardware



            6.5.2 Amplifiers and Speakers                                                         notes
            Often the speakers used during a project’s development will not be adequate for its presentation.
            Speakers with built-in amplifiers or attached to an external amplifier are important when the
            project will be presented to a large audience or in a noisy setting.
            6.5.3 Monitors
            The monitor needed for development of multimedia projects depends on the type of multimedia
            application created, as well as what computer is being used. A wide variety of monitors is available
            for both Macintoshes and PCs. High-end, large-screen graphics monitors are available for both,
            and they are expensive. Serious multimedia developers will often attach more than one monitor
            to their computers, using add-on graphic board. This is because many authoring systems allow
            working with several open windows at a time, so we can dedicate one monitor to viewing the
            work we are creating or designing, and we can perform various editing tasks in windows on other
            monitors that do not block the view of your work. Editing windows that overlap a work view when
            developing with Macromedia’s authoring environment, director, on one monitor. Developing in
            director is best with at least two monitors, one to view the work the other two view the “score”.
            A third monitor is often added by director developers to display the “Cast”.
            6.5.4 video Device

            No other contemporary message medium has the visual impact of video. With a video digitizing
            board installed in a computer, we can display a television picture on your monitor. Some boards
            include a frame-grabber feature for capturing the image and turning it in to a colour bitmap,
            which can be saved as a PICT or TIFF file and then used as part of a graphic or a background in
            your project.

            Display of video on any computer platform requires manipulation of an enormous amount of
            data. When used in conjunction with videodisc players, which give precise control over the
            images being viewed, video cards you place an image in to a window on the computer monitor;
            a second television screen dedicated to video is not required. And video cards typically come
            with excellent special effects software.

            There are many video cards available today. Most of these support various video in a window
            sizes, identification of source video, setup of play sequences are segments, special effects, frame
            grabbing, digital movie making; and some have built-in television tuners so you can watch your
            favourite programs in a window while working on other things. In windows, video overlay boards
            are controlled through the Media Control Interface. On the Macintosh, they are often controlled
            by external commands and functions (XCMDs and XFCNs) linked to your authoring software.
            Good video greatly enhances your project whereas poor video will ruin it. Whether you delivered
            your video from tape using VISCA controls, from videodisc, or as a QuickTime or AVI movie, it
            is important that your source material be of high quality.

            6.5.5 projectors
            When it is necessary to show a material to more viewers than can huddle around a computer
            monitor, it will be necessary to project it on to large screen or even a white painted wall. Cathode-
            ray tube (CRT) projectors, liquid crystal display (LCD) panels attached to an overhead projector,
            stand-alone LCD projectors, and light-valve projectors are available to splash the work on to
            big-screen surfaces.
            The CRT projectors have been around for quite a while they are the original “bigscreen” televisions.
            They use three separate projection tubes and lenses (red, green and blue), and three colour channels



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