Telesync (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Telesync" in English language version.

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afterdawn.com

  • afterdawn.com. "Glossary for film piracy terms". Archived from the original on 2012-02-04.

archive.org

  • Craig, Paul; Ron, Mark (April 2005). "Chapter 8: The Piracy Scene". In Burnett, Mark (ed.). Software Piracy Exposed - Secrets from the Dark Side Revealed. Publisher: Andrew Williams, Page Layout and Art: Patricia Lupien, Acquisitions Editor: Jaime Quigley, Copy Editor: Judy Eby, Technical Editor: Mark Burnett, Indexer: Nara Wood, Cover Designer: Michael Kavish. United States of America: Syngress Publishing. pp. 162–165. doi:10.1016/B978-193226698-6/50033-7. ISBN 1-932266-98-4. A telesync is a film recorded on a professional camera (often a digital beta-cam). The cameras are placed on steady tripods and the films are recorded in an empty cinema from the main projection booth. The sound is often recorded straight from the mixing board, giving the telesync a high-quality sound. Some releases even include surround sound in Audio Compression 3 (AC3) format. Telesyncs are the most common of early releases, often being the first release a movie site accepts. Telesync movies are easier to watch than their CAM counterparts, although the picture quality is usually slightly washed out and the contrast is often out of balance. Telesyncs are commonly traded on movie sites. They are the lowest quality allowed, but are still popular with many file traders.

doi.org

  • Craig, Paul; Ron, Mark (April 2005). "Chapter 8: The Piracy Scene". In Burnett, Mark (ed.). Software Piracy Exposed - Secrets from the Dark Side Revealed. Publisher: Andrew Williams, Page Layout and Art: Patricia Lupien, Acquisitions Editor: Jaime Quigley, Copy Editor: Judy Eby, Technical Editor: Mark Burnett, Indexer: Nara Wood, Cover Designer: Michael Kavish. United States of America: Syngress Publishing. pp. 162–165. doi:10.1016/B978-193226698-6/50033-7. ISBN 1-932266-98-4. A telesync is a film recorded on a professional camera (often a digital beta-cam). The cameras are placed on steady tripods and the films are recorded in an empty cinema from the main projection booth. The sound is often recorded straight from the mixing board, giving the telesync a high-quality sound. Some releases even include surround sound in Audio Compression 3 (AC3) format. Telesyncs are the most common of early releases, often being the first release a movie site accepts. Telesync movies are easier to watch than their CAM counterparts, although the picture quality is usually slightly washed out and the contrast is often out of balance. Telesyncs are commonly traded on movie sites. They are the lowest quality allowed, but are still popular with many file traders.
  • Kwok, Sai Ho (2004). "File sharing activities over BT Networks". Computers in Entertainment. 2 (2): 11. doi:10.1145/1008213.1008232. ISSN 1544-3574. S2CID 26051004. Pirated movies exist even before their official release since the Telesync (TS) version of movies shot in the cinema can be easily produced.

elsevier.com

  • Craig, Paul; Ron, Mark (April 2005). "Chapter 8: The Piracy Scene". In Burnett, Mark (ed.). Software Piracy Exposed - Secrets from the Dark Side Revealed. Publisher: Andrew Williams, Page Layout and Art: Patricia Lupien, Acquisitions Editor: Jaime Quigley, Copy Editor: Judy Eby, Technical Editor: Mark Burnett, Indexer: Nara Wood, Cover Designer: Michael Kavish. United States of America: Syngress Publishing. pp. 162–165. doi:10.1016/B978-193226698-6/50033-7. ISBN 1-932266-98-4. A telesync is a film recorded on a professional camera (often a digital beta-cam). The cameras are placed on steady tripods and the films are recorded in an empty cinema from the main projection booth. The sound is often recorded straight from the mixing board, giving the telesync a high-quality sound. Some releases even include surround sound in Audio Compression 3 (AC3) format. Telesyncs are the most common of early releases, often being the first release a movie site accepts. Telesync movies are easier to watch than their CAM counterparts, although the picture quality is usually slightly washed out and the contrast is often out of balance. Telesyncs are commonly traded on movie sites. They are the lowest quality allowed, but are still popular with many file traders.

no-copy.org

scenelingo.wordpress.com

semanticscholar.org

api.semanticscholar.org

  • Kwok, Sai Ho (2004). "File sharing activities over BT Networks". Computers in Entertainment. 2 (2): 11. doi:10.1145/1008213.1008232. ISSN 1544-3574. S2CID 26051004. Pirated movies exist even before their official release since the Telesync (TS) version of movies shot in the cinema can be easily produced.

web.archive.org

  • afterdawn.com. "Glossary for film piracy terms". Archived from the original on 2012-02-04.
  • Krömer, Jan; Sen, Evrim (2007) [2006]. "Chapter 3: All You Can Eat". No copy: die Welt der digitalen Raubkopie [No copy: the world of digital piracy] (in German). Germany: Tropical Publisher. pp. 110–111. ISBN 978-3-932170-82-9. Archived from the original on 2016-04-02.

worldcat.org

search.worldcat.org

  • Kwok, Sai Ho (2004). "File sharing activities over BT Networks". Computers in Entertainment. 2 (2): 11. doi:10.1145/1008213.1008232. ISSN 1544-3574. S2CID 26051004. Pirated movies exist even before their official release since the Telesync (TS) version of movies shot in the cinema can be easily produced.