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Create Multimedia signage with Denon Pro
Multimedia signage used to mean three things – poor quality, hard to use, and worst of all, unreliable. Now Denon Professional reinvents the world of multimedia signage with the DN-V755/V750 Network Audio/Visual Players.
Theme parks and convention centres, museums and malls, airports and educational facilities and many others will vastly improve the quality and effectiveness of their digital signage, while simultaneously making it easier to use.
Multiple control and programming options, along with hours of better than DVD quality video and CD quality audio, all combine to open a new world of flexibility and creativity in digital signage. Denon Professional’s revolutionary network emulation makes uploading media and scripts from a computer simple, and allows you to spend your time on your message, not on programming your presentation system. And of course, it’s all from Denon Professional, which means you can count on it working day in and day out.
Product highlights
- 40 GB internal hard drive (DN-V755 only)
- PCMCIA Flash Card slot (DN-V750 only)
- Up to 8 hours of DVD quality video
- Internally expandable to 137 GB
- Plays 720 x 480 MPEG-2 at 10 Mbps OR BELOW
- Plays I-Pictures (720 x 480)
- Plays Wav or MPEG-1 (layer II) audio at 44.1 kHz or 48 kHz
- Parallel remote control (Switch closure on 15-pin D-sub)
- Serial control (RS-232C on 9-pin D-sub)
- Ethernet control (LAN/RJ-45)
- Real-time clock for scripted/automated playback of A/V files
- FTP Site Command Server for audio, video, picture and scripting/automation uploads
- Simple Windows application for easy set-up and file transfer
- S-Video and Composite (RCA) video outputs
- Unbalanced (RCA) stereo audio outputs
For more information please visit www.audioproducts.com.au or www.d-mpro.eu.com. |
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www.audioproducts.com.au
www.audioproducts.co.nz
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Helpful Hints
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Audio signal processing, sometimes referred to as audio processing, is the processing of a representation of auditory signals, or sound. The representation can be digital or analog. An analog representation is usually electrical; a voltage level represents the air pressure waveform of the sound. Similarly, a digital representation expresses the pressure wave-form as a sequence of symbols, usually binary numbers. | |
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