resolution - Measuring and describing resolution in analog
video systems is tricky. In digital video systems, you can simply use
pixel dimensions: for example, you might say a particular digital video
system has 352x240 resolution. In the analog world (e.g. over-the-air
television, cable TV, composite and S-video...), the only firm resolution
is the "horizontal lines of resolution". For example, NTSC has
480 horizontal lines of resolution. (By the way, be careful to note that
when you're talking about the vertical resolution of a picture, you speak
of horizontal lines — 480 horizontal lines of resolution means that
you can display up to 480 alternating black and white horizontal lines
and see them all distinctly. Similarly, the horizontal resolution is
defined in terms of vertical lines.) Horizontal resolution is trickier:
in an analog system, there is no way to tell how many vertical lines of
resolution the system can show without measuring it, either with physics
or by running a test signal through a system and viewing the result. For
example, the low-resolution VHS format will only distinguish about 240
vertical lines of resolution. The tape format simply can't store any more
detail than this. Your television probably has 400-500 vertical lines of
resolution, and professional equipment has at least 720 vertical lines
of resolution.