12 C H A P T E R © 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved1 Commonly Found Internet File Types When you use an Internet search engine.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. Slide 4-1 Created by Cheryl M. Hughes The Web Wizards Guide to XML by Cheryl M. Hughes.
Advertisements

3.01C Multimedia Elements and Guidelines 3.01 Explore multimedia systems, elements and presentations.
The Keys to Speed. File Extensions Definition A tag of three or four letters, preceded by a period, which identifies a data file's format or the application.
9 C H A P T E R © 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved1 Communicating in Real Time Now it is also possible to converse in real time.
2.02F Publishing Animated Videos 2.02 Develop Computer Animations.
Computer Fundamentals Multimedia MSCH 233 Lecture 10.
Chapter 11 Media and Interactivity Basics Key Concepts Copyright © 2013 Terry Ann Morris, Ed.D 1.
2 Information Processing
Web Design Vocab 3 PNG, JPG, GIF, MP3, MPEG.
Chapter 11 Media and Interactivity Basics Key Concepts
4.2 Multimedia Elements Audio 1. Learning Outcomes: At the end of the lesson, students should be: a) describe the purpose of using audio in multimedia.
HTML Structure & Web Design Basics
Charmaine NormanCopyright What Is a Web Page Presented by Webpagemaker. Net Left click your mouse to view each frame, Web Page.
Sounds, Images & Other Objects Website Production.
 Multimedia is everything you can hear or see: texts, books, pictures, music, sounds, CDs, videos, DVDs, Records, Films, and more.  Multimedia comes.
3.02C Multimedia Fair Uses Guidelines and Elements
3.02 Publishing Animations
WMES3103 : INFORMATION RETRIEVAL
IT-Academic Technology Services Using Microsoft PowerPoint 2010 for Digital Storytelling.
HYPERTEXT MARKUP LANGUAGE (HTML)
HYPERTEXT MARKUP LANGUAGE (HTML) Vijaya K Pandey.
Nat 4/5 - Software Design and Development – Low Level Operations - 1 National 4/5 – Computing Science Information Systems Design and Development Media.
Section 9.1 Section 9.2 YOU WILL LEARN TO…
Skill Area 212 Introduction to Multimedia Internet and MultiMedia for SC 2.
University of Sunderland CDM105 Session 1. University of Sunderland CDM105 Session 1 Assessment This module is assessed by 2 pieces of practical Coursework.
Chapter 14-Designing for the World Wide Web. Overview Introducing multimedia on the Web. Designing text for the Web. Creating images for the Web. Adding.
Commonly Found Internet File Types The Internet provides access to many types of files, more than just HTML.
Sem 1 v2 Chapter 14: Layer 6 - The Presentation layer.
Chapter 9 Graphics and Multimedia on the World Wide Web.
Institute of Technology Sligo - Dept of Computing Sem 1 Chapter 14: Layer 6 - The Presentation layer.
1 Lecture 12: Multimedia Not in Web 101 Text  Important Multimedia Issues  Audio  Movies and Video  Multimedia and HTML Documents.
Multimedia and The Web.
Chapter 13-Tools for the World Wide Web. Overview Web servers. Web browsers. Web page makers and site builders. Plug-ins and delivery vehicles. Beyond.
1.1 What is Multimedia Multimedia
Chapter 2 The Internet. Evolution of the Internet History of the internet.
Common file formats  Lesson Objective: Understanding common file formats and their differences.  Learning Outcome:  Describe the type of files which.
GIF - Graphics Interchange Format JPEG - Joint Photographic Experts Group PNG - Portable Network Graphics GIF images are limited to the 8 bit palette which.
Multimedia From Greenlaw/Hepp, In-line/On-line: Fundamentals of the Internet and the World Wide Web 1 Introduction Important Multimedia Issues Audio Movies.
M404 Multimedia Elements Form 4.
File Formats Different applications (programs) store data in different formats. Applications support some file formats and not others. Open…, Save…, Save.
File Format. Graphics file Format GIF (Graphics Interchange Format) JPEG (Joint Photographic Experts Group) PNG (Portable Network Graphics) TIFF (Tag.
File Format. Graphic file Format GIF –cross-platform compatibility –developed by CompuServe as a common format for exchanging bitmapped images between.
Multimedia Web Pages. Multimedia displays Browser can load web pages that contains multimedia elements 1. Helper applications: stand-alone programs that.
Chap 14 Presentation Layer Andres, Wen-Yuan Liao Department of Computer Science and Engineering De Lin Institute of Technology
Image File Formats. What is an Image File Format? Image file formats are standard way of organizing and storing of image files. Image files are composed.
Multimedia. What is multimedia? Multimedia is everything you can hear or see: texts, books, pictures, music, sounds, CDs, videos, DVDs, Records, Films,
Chapter 6:Graphics & Multimedia. “ MULTIMEDIA is a seamless integration of data, text, image of all kinds and sound within a digital environment. ” FELDMAN,
Multimedia in Web Introduction. Multimedia Elements in Web Page Images Voice Music Animation Video Text & Numbers.
Audio Streaming © Nanda Ganesan, Ph.D.. Audio File Features Audio file is a record of captured sound that can be played back –The WAV File is an example.
Lesson 5 MULTIMEDIA. Multimedia on the Web has expanded rapidly as broadband connections have allowed users to connect at faster speeds. Almost all Web.
Layer 6 Presentation Layer. Overview Now that you have learned about Layer 5 of the OSI model, it is time to look at Layer 6, the presentation layer.
Part A Multimedia Production
File Formats Different applications (programs) store data in different formats. Applications support some file formats and not others. Open…, Save…, Save.
Section 9.1 Section 9.2 YOU WILL LEARN TO…
Section 9.1 Section 9.2 Identify multimedia design guidelines
Web Programming– UFCFB Lecture 8
3.01F Publishing Animated Videos
3.01C Multimedia Fair Uses Guidelines and Elements
Integrating Multimedia: Sound, Video and More
Graphics Basic Concepts.
3.01C Multimedia Elements and Guidelines
3.01C Multimedia Fair Uses Guidelines and Elements
3.01C Multimedia Fair Uses Guidelines and Elements
Lesson 5: Multimedia on the Web
Web Programming– UFCFB Lecture 8
3.01C Multimedia Elements and Guidelines
Multimedia Production
File Compression and Formats
(c) V/2-Com (Verhaart) Multimedia Elements & standards 4/15/2019 (c) V/2-Com (Verhaart)
3.01C Multimedia Fair Uses Guidelines and Elements
Presentation transcript:

12 C H A P T E R © 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved1 Commonly Found Internet File Types When you use an Internet search engine to find something, the information is almost always returned in the form of a file. The way in which the file is organized is known as its format.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved2 C H A P T E R 12 Objectives:  Recognize the commonly found Internet file types.  Understand how browsers launch different plug-ins and helper applications to play certain types of files.  Explain why MIDI files occupy so much less file space than waveform audio files

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved3 C H A P T E R 12 Objectives:  Understand the concept of a markup language.  Know the difference between the GIF and JPEG graphics formats.  Understand why the audio/video interleave (AVI) file format was designed to give audio the priority when a computer does not have enough processing time to show all of the frames of a movie.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved4 C H A P T E R 12 Objectives:  Explain the difference between lossy and lossless compression methods.  Understand how animated GIFs can bring a Web page to life.  Explain the concept of JavaScript.  Understand the purpose of Adobe’s Portable Document Format.  Avoid the common pitfall of changing a filename extension when you rename a file.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved5 C H A P T E R 12 Text Formats  Plain text means just that—the text and nothing but the text.  There are three families of text formats:  Plain text (TXT)  HTML (Hypertext)  Word processor files DOC (Microsoft Word) WPD (WordPerfect)

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved6 C H A P T E R 12 HTML How a HTML file appears when viewed with a browser. How a HTML file appears when viewed with a text editor.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved7 C H A P T E R 12 Image Formats  The computer industry has produced so many graphics formats (more than 30 at last count) that there is no true standard across the industry.  On the Web, however, there are only two file formats that every Web browser can be guaranteed to support: GIF and JPEG.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved8 C H A P T E R 12 Image Formats .bmpWindows bitmap. The.bmp file is the most efficient format to use with Windows. .gifGraphics Interchange Format. Invented by CompuServe for use on computer networks, GIF is the most prevalent graphics format for images on the World Wide Web. .pcdKodak’s Photo CD graphics file format; contains five different sizes of each picture, from “wallet” size to “poster” size.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved9 C H A P T E R 12 Image Formats .jpg or.jpegJPEG image, named for the standards committee that formed it: Joint Photographic Experts Group. Intended to become a platform-independent graphics format. .pictMacintosh graphics format. .pngPortable Network Graphics format. Pronounced ping,.png is the patent and license-free format approved by the W3C (World Wide Web Consortium) to replace the patented GIF format.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved10 C H A P T E R 12 Image Formats .tgaTruevision Targa format; tga stands for Targa, which is a video capture board. .tifTIFF file; stands for Tagged Image File Format. Known as “the variable standard” because there are so many kinds of TIFF subformats. .wpgWordPerfect graphics format.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved11 C H A P T E R 12 Waveform Audio Formats  Every sound has a waveform that describes its frequency, amplitude, and harmonic content.  Waveform audio digitizers capture sound by sampling this waveform thousands of times per second; the samples are stored in a computer file.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved12 C H A P T E R 12 Waveform Audio Formats  WAV - On multimedia PCs, the most common waveform audio filename extension is.wav, which stands for waveform.  AU and SND - The Sun audio format filename extension is.au, and the NeXT format is.snd. These formats are essentially the same, except that.au files do not have file headers to specify different sampling rates and compression formats.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved13 C H A P T E R 12 Waveform Audio Formats  RA and RAM - Real-time audio streaming used in Internet radio broadcasts requires a special file format optimized for real-time transmission over the Internet. The RealAudio filename extensions are.ra and.ram, which stands for RealAudio metafile.  AIF, AIFF, AIFC - AIFF stands for Audio Interchange File Format. Apple invented this file format to create and play audio files on the Macintosh.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved14 C H A P T E R 12 Waveform Audio Formats  MIDI Synthesizer Format (MID) - MIDI stands for Musical Instrument Digital Interface. MIDI is a music synthesizer file format that requires very little bandwidth to transmit, because the sound chip inside your multimedia PC does the work of generating the waveform you hear.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved15 C H A P T E R 12 Waveform Audio Formats  MP3 - MP3 is one of the most popular audio formats on the Internet. MP3 stands for MPEG audio layer 3. It’s an audio file format that uses an MPEG audio codec to encode (compress) and decode (decompress) recorded music. MP3 can compress a CD-audio track into a substantially smaller-sized file requiring significantly less bandwidth.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved16 C H A P T E R 12 MIDI Synthesizer Format  MIDI stands for Musical Instrument Digital Interface. MIDI is a music synthesizer file format that requires very little bandwidth to transmit, because the sound chip inside your multimedia PC does the work of generating the waveform you hear.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved17 C H A P T E R 12 Video Formats  When a movie gets digitized into a computer file, the digital data stream is enormous. To conserve filespace and thereby reduce the bandwidth required to transmit the movie, the video gets compressed.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved18 C H A P T E R 12 Video Formats  Video Compression Schemes  YUV subsampling - Divides the screen into little squares and averages color values of the pixels in each square.  Delta frame encoding - Shrinks data by storing only the information that changes between frames; for example, if the background scene does not change, there is no need to store the scene again.  Run length encoding - Detects a “run” of identical pixels and encodes how many occur instead of recording each individual pixel.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved19 C H A P T E R 12 Video Formats  AVI - The most common video format in the Windows world is Microsoft’s AVI, which has the.avi filename extension. AVI stands for audio/video interleave, which describes a clever scheme in which audio frames are interleaved with the video.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved20 C H A P T E R 12 Video Formats  MOV and QT - Because of its cross- platform capabilities, QuickTime has become very popular on the Internet. The filename extensions of QuickTime movies are.qt and.mov.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved21 C H A P T E R 12 Video Formats  MPG, MPEG, and MPE - MPEG is emerging as the digital video standard for the United States and most of the world. MPEG stands for Motion Picture Experts Group, the name of the International Standards Organization committee that created it.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved22 C H A P T E R 12 Video Formats  RM - RealVideo follows the real-time streaming protocol (RTSP) that RealNetworks invented for streaming audio and video over the Internet, the filename extension is.rm.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved23 C H A P T E R 12 Animation Formats  Animation is the use of a computer to create movement on the screen. There are several ways to bring Web pages to life through animation.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved24 C H A P T E R 12 Animation Formats  Animated GIFs - Animated GIFs are a special kind of GIF file (known as GIF89a) that may contain multiple images that get shown in a sequence at specific times and locations on the screen. A looping option causes your Web browser to keep showing the frames in the GIF file continually, and as a result, you see an animation on screen.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved25 C H A P T E R 12 Animation Formats  JavaScript - As noted earlier, Java is a programming environment used to create little applications known as applets that can be downloaded along with a Web page. One of the main uses of applets is to make Web pages become animated.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved26 C H A P T E R 12 Animation Formats  QuickTime - Apple Computer Corporation has created a plug-in whereby QuickTime movies can be embedded as animation objects on Web pages. Both Netscape Communicator and Microsoft Internet Explorer support this plug-in.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved27 C H A P T E R 12 Animation Formats  Shockwave - Macromedia’s Director is the undisputed leader in multimedia animation. Shockwave is a Macromedia product that enables animations created with Director, Authorware, and Flash to plug in to Web pages.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved28 C H A P T E R 12 Portable Document Format (PDF)  PDF - To provide a way to digitize printed text into a format that can be viewed on any computer platform, Adobe created the Portable Document Format, for which the filename extension is.pdf. PDF files are created by scanning printed documents into bitmaps that work like photographs of the printed pages.

© 2001 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All Rights Reserved29 C H A P T E R 12 Avoiding the Pitfall of Renaming Filename Extensions  When you save a file you can change the name of the file. Be careful, however, not to rename the filename extension.  Remember that your computer looks at the filename extension to determine what application will be used to handle the file. Renaming the filename extension will only confuse your computer when you try to access the file.