DVDO VP50 用户手册

下载
页码 68
0.4  How does automation work? 
The iScan line of DVDO brand video processors are designed to enable control and 
flexibility over various input and output signal configurations – as well as our proprietary 
algorithms to improve several aspects of video quality and enable new capabilities that 
legacy devices by themselves are not able to achieve.  This product has many features 
(covered in the User’s Manual) which are intended to make day-to-day use of our video 
processing product easier in systems from “simple” up to “complex and fully integrated” 
home-theaters, or “corporate/industrial” applications.  It is up to the user or system’s 
integrator to “turn on” or otherwise set up the unit (and select appropriate auxiliary 
hardware) to enable this functionality within a given media presentation system.  With 
the exception of some automatic functions which are user selectable (at the time of this 
writing: Input Selections, Deinterlacing Modes, and Output Profiles), the unit must be 
prompted by user action to do a specific function or provide a given signal path. 
This user function can be initiated by an external device, like a Home Automation 
controller, Control Sequencer, or Learning/Macro-Infrared-Remote-Control.  These 
execute the “user action” as part of a predefined “routine” or “script”.  Home Automation 
controllers, sequencers, or macro-remotes can control many devices at once, making a 
task like switching from one source device to another on three pieces of equipment occur 
with one user input action (this also reduces the amount of remote controls a given 
system has on a table).  The iScan can accept either RS-232 based serial automation 
commands, or infrared remote control commands to enable very precise and “intelligent” 
control of the unit’s behavior. 
0.4.1 Interface 
Compatibility 
Our devices have been designed to work with industry standardized control systems 
based on either “EIA232”-“RS-232C” asynchronous bidirectional serial character data 
transfers, or NEC or ABT-proprietary based Infra-Red (IR) one-way serial character data 
transfers operating at a 38.38kHz carrier frequency.  The control sets for both methods 
are based on the same command IDs and control values for the sake of simplicity and 
ease of overall protocol mastery. 
0.4.2  How is data encoded in digital form? 
Digital electronics are very good with math and numbers – but they do not know how 
to “think” or talk in human-readable sentences.  Because of this, programmers have 
created a “look-up-table” of standard characters which humans understand, and 
numerical equivalents for those characters which the device understands.  There are 
several different ways to place characters in a table, and many different geographic 
locations which have special characters that need to be encoded.  For the sake of 
standardization and compatibility, we have selected the UTF-8 standard which is 
backwards compatible with the ASCII standard of encoding characters to a numeric table 
(ASCII only uses 8-bit values between 0 and 127 - the specifics of these two standards 
are not covered, as numerous references for these are available at public libraries or the 
internet). 
 
 
8