Digital systems/Latency (Q976)

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Revision as of 15:04, 26 July 2024 by JoernNettingsmeier (talk | contribs) (‎Created claim: Property:P66: Analog systems work at the speed of light in copper, which is to say, without any perceptible delay. All digital systems however introduce a little bit of latency, and it accumulates along the signal chain.)

Analog systems work at the speed of light in copper, which is to say, without any perceptible delay. All digital systems however introduce a little bit of latency, and it accumulates along the signal chain.

Analog systems work at the speed of light in copper, which is to say, without any perceptible delay. All digital systems however introduce a little bit of latency, and it accumulates along the signal chain.
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Digital systems/Latency
Analog systems work at the speed of light in copper, which is to say, without any perceptible delay. All digital systems however introduce a little bit of latency, and it accumulates along the signal chain.

    Statements

    15
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    the concept of latency (English)
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    causes of latency along the signal chain (English)
    sample rate and system latency (English)
    packetized transport (e.g. Ethernet) (English)
    sample-rate conversion (English)
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    optimizing system latency (English)
    non-critical signal paths: large-area sound reinforcement, recording (English)
    critical singnal paths: musician monitoring (especially in-ear) (English)
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    SQQ7 - 8.1.4
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    Analog systems work at the speed of light in copper, which is to say, without any perceptible delay. All digital systems however introduce a little bit of latency, and it accumulates along the signal chain. (English)
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    ESCO description

    Sectoral layer

    Assessment

    References

     

    Wikidata