Chuck
Encoding can be used to make the file; a database or a word processed document smaller so that it requires less memory on the computers hard drive or memory stick. An example of encoded data could be 'Male' = 'M' or 'Blue' = 'B'
The information (card number, card holder name, and other information) is encoded as ones and zeros, then encoded magnetically as data bits onto the magnetic stripe. When the stripe is passed by the read head, it reads how each portion is magnetized (a North or South pole magnetization) and then outputs that as a 1 or 0 to the rest of the system.
PAL is the color encoding method used in Europe and other parts of the world. North America, Japan and other countries use NTSC. Although the two encoding methods are similar, the signals are not compatible. A third color standard used by France is SECAM. SECAM is used in a handful of other countries but is not a common standard. PAL and SECAM encoded signals are normally used at 50Hz while NTSC normally uses 59.94Hz. There are some rare exceptions to these field rates but it is normally safe to assume that 50Hz material will be PAL encoded and 59.94Hz will be NTSC encoded.
BDRip and BRRip are NOT the same thing. BDRip comes directly from the Blu-ray source, while a BRRip is encoded from a pre-release.
PS2 games purchased in Peru will be encoded on the NTSC format. This should make them compatible with US PlayStation 2's which are also part of the NTSC coding.
The suffix in the word encoded is -ed.
The suffix for encoded is "-ed".
The past tense of "encode" is "encoded."
Encoded and it means "typed a message".
8 Streams of audio can be encoded to a DVD.
no
no
it means encoded :
trait
DNA
DNA
Transposase