Best DVD Copy Software Review
Gossary
Land
The raised area of an optical disc.
laserdisc
A 12-inch disk that's similar to an audio CD but holds visual images (such
as high-quality movies) as well as music. Also called a videodisc.
layer
The plane of a DVD disc on which information is recorded in a pattern
of microscopic pits. Each substrate of a disc can contain one or two layers.
Layer 0
In a dual-layer disc, this is the layer closest to the optical pickup
beam and surface of the disc, and the first to be read when scanning from
the beginning of the disc's data. Dual-layer discs are 10% less dense
than single layer discs due to crosstalk between the layers.
Layer 1
In a dual-layer disc, this is the deeper of the two layers, and the second
one to be read when scanning from the beginning of the disc's data.
lead in
The physical area 1.2 mm or wider preceding the data area on a disc. The
lead in contains sync sectors and control data including disc keys and
other information.
lead out
On a single-layer disc or PTP dual-layer disc, the physical area 1.0 mm
or wider toward the outside of the disc following the data area. On an
OTP dual-layer disc, the physical area 1.2mm or wider at the inside of
the disc following the recorded data area (which is read from the outside
toward the inside on the second layer).
legacy
A term used to describe a hybrid disc that can be played in both a DVD
player and a CD player.
letterbox filter
Circuitry in a DVD player that reduces the vertical size of anamorphic
widescreen video (combining every 4 lines into 3) and adds black mattes
at the top and bottom. Also see filter.
letterbox
The process or form of video where black horizontal mattes are added to
the top and bottom of the display area in order to create a frame in which
to display video using an aspect ratio different than that of the display.
The letterbox method preserves the entire video picture, as opposed to
pan & scan. DVD-Video players can automatically letterbox a widescreen
picture for display on a standard 4:3 TV.
level
In MPEG-2, levels specify parameters such as resolution, bit rate, and
frame rate. Compare to profile.
line doubler
A video processor that doubles the number of lines in the scanning system
in order to create a display with scan lines that are less visible. Some
line doublers convert from interlaced to progressive scan.
linear PCM
A coded representation of digital data that is not compressed. Linear
PCM spreads values evenly across the range from highest to lowest, as
opposed to nonlinear (companded) PCM which allocates more values to more
important frequency ranges.
lines of horizontal resolution
Sometimes abbreviated as TVL (TV lines) or LoHR. A common but subjective
measurement of the visually resolvable horizontal detail of an analog
video system, measured in half-cycles per picture height. Each cycle is
a pair of vertical lines, one black and one white. The measurement is
usually made by viewing a test pattern to determine where the black and
white lines blur into gray. The resolution of VHS video is commonly gauged
at 240 lines of horizontal resolution, broadcast video at 330, laserdisc
at 425, and DVD at 500 to 540. Because the measurement is relative to
picture height, the aspect ratio must be taken into account when determining
the number of vertical units (roughly equivalent to pixels) that can be
displayed across the width of the display. For example, an aspect ratio
of 1.33 multiplied by 540 gives 720 pixels.
Lo/Ro
Left only/right only. Stereo signal (no matrixed surround information).
Optional downmixing output in Dolby Digital decoders. Does not change
phase, simply folds surround channels forward into Lf and Rf.
locale
See R regional code.
logical unit
A physical or virtual peripheral device, such as a DVD-ROM drive.
logical
An artificial structure or organization of information created for convenience
of access or reference, usually different from the physical structure
or organization. For example, the application specifications of DVD (the
way information is organized and stored) are logical formats.
lossless compression
Compression techniques that allow the original data to be recreated without
loss. Contrast with lossy compression.
lossy compression
Compression techniques that achieve very high compression ratios by permanently
removing data while preserving as much significant information as possible.
Lossy compression includes perceptual coding techniques that attempt to
limit the data loss to that which is least likely to be noticed by human
perception.
LP
Long-playing record. An audio recording on a plastic platter turning at
331/3 rpm and read by a stylus.
Lt/Rt
Left total/right total. Four surround channels matrixed into two channels.
Mandatory downmixing output in Dolby Digital decoders.
luma (Y')
The brightness component of a color video image (also called the grayscale,
monochrome, or black-and-white component). Nonlinear luminance. The standard
luma signal is computed from nonlinear RGB as Y' = 0.299 R' + 0.587 G'
+ 0.114 B'.
luminance (Y)
Loosely, the sum of RGB tristimulus values corresponding to brightness.
May refer to a linear signal or (incorrectly) a nonlinear signal.
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