SP means Standard Play, the speed the tape was designed for. LP means Long Play and EP means Extended Play.
The full form of SP is Superintendent of Police, in India.
Superintendent of Police
full form of sp
sundhara paandiya pattinam
The full form of SP can vary depending on the context. It could stand for "Service Provider," "Security Policy," "Sales Price," or other possibilities.
Deputy superintendent of police
Bar fLR full form is used for recording Incident Reports.
To change a VHS tape from SLP (Standard Play) to SP (Standard Play), you need to use a VCR that has the ability to record in SP mode. Simply insert the VHS tape into the VCR and set the recording mode to SP. Then, play the tape while simultaneously recording it onto a new blank VHS tape in SP mode. This process will create a new SP version of the original content from the SLP tape.
The letters "sp" (either in lower or upper case) can have several different meanings. Sometimes it is used by an editor to note a spelling error. In upper case (SP) it can stand for Shore Police (to the navy), or (to a Scientologist) Suppressive Person.
If the research has identified which SP and NEMS you want to know about. SP means the Scaleable POWERPC chip some people sue. NEMS is either the register name of a company or a shortened version of NanoElectroMechanical method of making very small (single atom sized) machines
The amount of time you can record to a DVD depends on the recording mode you choose. DVD recorders have various recording modes that vary from recorder to recorder but most include SP, LP, and EP modes. Some also offer XP, SLP, SEP modes. These modes offer a trade off between quality and recording time with XP having the highest quality but the shortest recording time and SEP having the longest recording time but the poorest quality.The quality and recording times of each recording mode will vary between different DVD recorders. Here is a list of common recording times for each recording mode:XP - 1 HourSP - 2 HoursLP - 4 HoursEP - 6 HoursSLP - 8 HoursSEP - 10 HoursFor all practical purposes, SP is what is most commonly used. Use LP if you need to record a live event or a continuous recording when you cannot change DVDs midway through. When it comes to recording DVDs, a general rule is to have the highest quality input source possible and the greatest recording quality that you can get. For example, recording a VHS to DVD, use SP. Most VHS are 120 minutes long, so the SP recording of two hours will fit the VHS tape on one DVD without any quality loss and minimum risk of skipping.In conclusion, DVDs can hold up to 10 hours of video, depending on the DVD recorder you use. With DVDs, time and quality are inversely proportional. The longer the recording time, the poorer the quality and the more likely you will have video and audio skips during playback. For most practical application, use SP to maintain a high quality and get around two hours of recording time.
It's used to mean "spelling"