• DocumentCode
    1350314
  • Title

    Defining multimedia

  • Author

    Purchase, Helen

  • Author_Institution
    Queensland Univ., Qld., Australia
  • Volume
    5
  • Issue
    1
  • fYear
    1998
  • Firstpage
    8
  • Lastpage
    15
  • Abstract
    Multimedia is variously and often ambiguously defined. While most people might accept a mix of voice, text and graphics, they might resist calling a live lecture on a titled work of art a multimedia presentation. On the other hand, many definitions focus entirely on technology: multimedia seems to be defined by the hardware required rather than by the user´s experience. For example, despite the statement that any computer application that employs a video disk, images from a CD-ROM, uses high-quality sound, or uses high-quality video images on a screen may be termed a multimedia application, the author doubts that anyone would use the term multimedia for a computer application that merely plays a piece of music. She suggests a model of media objects that does not refer to technology or interactivity, but rather concentrates on the nature of the text. This model provides a useful basis for defining multimedia communication securely and unambiguously
  • Keywords
    multimedia systems; CD-ROM images; computer application; graphics; hardware; high-quality sound; high-quality video images; media objects; multimedia communication; multimedia systems; text; video disk; voice; Bicycles; Bonding; Concrete; Decoding; Multimedia systems; Music; Rendering (computer graphics); Taxonomy; Terminology; Traffic control;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    MultiMedia, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    1070-986X
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/93.664737
  • Filename
    664737