Video compression uses I, P, and B frames, with I frames containing a complete image, P frames containing changes from previous frames, and B frames containing changes from previous and future frames. I and P frames are encoded using motion compensation and DCT, while B frames use motion vectors from surrounding frames during encoding. Video standards like NTSC and PAL specify resolutions for luminance and chrominance components.
Video compression uses I, P, and B frames, with I frames containing a complete image, P frames containing changes from previous frames, and B frames containing changes from previous and future frames. I and P frames are encoded using motion compensation and DCT, while B frames use motion vectors from surrounding frames during encoding. Video standards like NTSC and PAL specify resolutions for luminance and chrominance components.
Video compression uses I, P, and B frames, with I frames containing a complete image, P frames containing changes from previous frames, and B frames containing changes from previous and future frames. I and P frames are encoded using motion compensation and DCT, while B frames use motion vectors from surrounding frames during encoding. Video standards like NTSC and PAL specify resolutions for luminance and chrominance components.
Fred Halsall I, P and B frames I ,P and B Frames Problem and Solution P frame encoding B frame I and P frame encoding B frame encoding Problem and Solution