girişikleme

listen to the pronunciation of girişikleme
Türkçe - İngilizce
interleaving
data that has undergone this action
The action of interleaving
Present participle of interleave
(Bilgisayar) Interlacing (also known as interleaving) is a method of encoding a bitmap image such that a person who has partially received it sees a degraded copy of the entire image. When communicating over a slow communications link, this is often preferable to seeing a perfectly clear copy of one part of the image, as it helps the viewer decide more quickly whether to abort or continue the transmission
See: Slipsheeting to top
A process of using sheets of paper or other material to separate items Buffering paper is often recommended to be put between acid materials to prevent acid migration
A hard-disk term that describes a method of arranging disk sectors to compensate for relatively slow computers Spreads sectors apart instead of arranging them consecutively For example, 3: 1 interleaving means your system reads one out of every three tracks on one rotation The time required for the extra spin lets the read/write head catch up with the disk drive, which might otherwise outrun the head's ability to read the data Thanks to track buffering and the speed of today's PCs, interleaving is obsolete Look for a "1: 1 interleaving," which indicates a noninterleaved drive
A process of scrambling the order of symbols to be transmitted over a channel in such a way that, when they are descrambled (at the receiver), any burst of channel errors will be spread out in time and thus appear as random errors to the decoder
The placing of a sheet of paper between two adjacent layers of metal to facilitate handling and shearing of rectangular sheets, or to prevent sticking or scratching
A process rendering data more immune to burst errors whereby bytes from one input group are assigned to multiple output groups upon recording using a precisely defined method De-interleaving during reading reverses the interleaving process, assembling data while dispersing read errors (also see CIRC )
A method of reducing errors in digital data, interleaving distributes and intermingles the consecutive bits or words of data, spreading them over a wider area on the storage media, and scattering potential errors This helps protect against consecutive errors when the data is read back A variety of different schemes for interleaving are used for CD, DAT and other medias, but as an example, on DAT one method uses one record head to write the right channel's even samples and the left's odd samples, while the other head writes the left channel's even samples, and the right's odd samples In the case of a burst error (such as those caused by a dirty head), only half of either channel's samples will be affected, allowing interpolation to conceal the lost data
The placing of sheets of paper between printed sheets as they come from the machine to prevent set-off
Interleaving is a recording method that reduces data errors during playback Instead of the file being written in a contiguous data stream, the data sectors are intermixed along the recording track If a disc should have a smudge or scratch, the entire data file is generally recoverable because a smaller amount of the file data is affected
process whereby prints are separated one from another by a sheet of non-adhering material, used to prevent blocking
Method used with alarms or activity detection which allows extra frames of video from alarmed cameras to be added to a time multiplexed sequence whilist a state of alarm exists
The process of reordering code symbols for transmission Interleaving decorrelates channel fading between adjacent symbols as they enter the decoder, thereby improving the effectiveness of the code
Techniques for increasing memory speed For example, with separate memory banks for odd and even addresses, the next byte of memory can be accessed while the current byte refreshes
An acid-free sheet that is placed between pages in a scrapbook (or in organizing) when no sheet protector is used The sheet prevents a photo from touching another one, which could result in scratching and damage to the emulsion
A means for rearranging recorded data to minimize the loss of information due to playback errors
 The transmission of pulses from two or more digital sources in time-division sequence over a single path   (188)
girişikleme