TY - BOOK TI - Multimedia Systems SN - 0201532581 AV - QA76.575 .M85 1994 PY - 1994/// CY - New York, Reading, Mass. PB - ACM Press, Addison-Wesley Pub. Co KW - Multimedia systems N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; OVERVIEW. 1. Uses of Multimedia Information, John Buford. 2. The Convergence of Computers,Communications, and Entertainment Products, Jeff Porter. 3. Architectures and Issues for DistributedMultimedia Systems, John Buford. MEDIA AND TIME. 4. Digital Audio Representation andProcessing, John Strawn. 5. Video Technology, Arch Luther. 6. Digital Video and Image Compression, Arch Luther. 7. Time-Based Media Representation and Delivery, Thomas D. Little. MULTIMEDIA INFORMATION SYSTEMS. 8. Operating System Support for Continuous Media, Hideyuki Tokuda. 9. Middleware System Services Architecture. 10. Multimedia Devices, PresentationServices, and the User Interface, John Buford. 11. Multimedia File Systems and InformationModels, John Buford. 12. Multimedia Presentation andAuthoring, David Backer. MULTIMEDIA COMMUNICATIONS SYSTEMS. 13. Multimedia Services over the PublicNetwork: Requirements, Architectures, and Protocols, Prodip Sen. 14. Multimedia Interchange, John Buford. 15. Multimedia Conferencing, John Buford. 16. Multimedia Groupware: Computer and Video Fusion Approachto Open Shared Workspace, Hiroshi Ishii and Naomi Miyake. FUTURE DIRECTIONS. 17. High Definition Television and Desktop Computing, Charles Poynton. 18. Knowledge-Based Multimedia Systems, Jeannette Neal and Stuart Shapiro. Index. Membership Information N2 - This carefully edited book provides a technical introduction to key issues in multimedia, including detailed discussion of new technologies, principles, current research, and future directions. The book covers important interdisciplinary aspects of digital multimedia systems, among them sound and video recording, television engineering, digital signal processing, systems architectures, user interface, and algorithms. Multimedia Systems furnishes a unified treatment of recent developments in the field, bringing together in one volume multimedia elements common to a range of computing areas such as operating systems, database management systems, network communications, and user interface technology. Features Comprehensive overview of fundamental principles and key issues in multimedia computing. Integrated presentation of multimedia technologies and their applications to a variety of settings. Author and contributors are leading researchers in multimedia computing. Large number of illustrations ER -