frame grabber - meaning and definition. What is frame grabber
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What (who) is frame grabber - definition

ELECTRONIC DEVICE THAT CAPTURES (I.E., "GRABS") INDIVIDUAL, DIGITAL STILL FRAMES FROM AN ANALOG VIDEO SIGNAL OR A DIGITAL VIDEO STREAM
Video grabber; Framegrabber; Frame grabbing
  • Analog HD frame grabber

frame grabber         
<hardware> A device that captures a single frame from an analog video signal (from a video camera or VCR) and stores it as a digital image under computer control. (1997-07-11)
AU Grabber         
SELF-PROPELLED MINING VESSEL, EXCAVATOR-BASED DREDGING BARGE FOR SLUICING GOLD
Draft:AU Grabber
The AU Grabber (pronounced as: Gold Grabber;"Au" is the chemical symbol for gold) is a self-propelled barge excavator dredge used to mine Bering Sea placer gold deposits in the region around Nome, Alaska, USA. It is owned and operated by Richard Schimschat and featured in the Discovery Channel USA mining reality TV show Bering Sea Gold.
Hive frame         
  • Empty Langstroth hive frames with thick top bars
STRUCTURAL ELEMENT IN A BEEHIVE
Beehive frame; Frame (beehive); Honey frame
A hive frame or honey frame is a structural element in a beehive that holds the honeycomb or brood comb within the hive enclosure or box. The hive frame is a key part of the modern movable-comb hive.

Wikipedia

Frame grabber

A frame grabber is an electronic device that captures (i.e., "grabs") individual, digital still frames from an analog video signal or a digital video stream. It is usually employed as a component of a computer vision system, in which video frames are captured in digital form and then displayed, stored, transmitted, analyzed, or combinations of these.

Historically, frame grabber expansion cards were the predominant way to interface cameras to PCs. Other interface methods have emerged since then, with frame grabbers (and in some cases, cameras with built-in frame grabbers) connecting to computers via interfaces such as USB, Ethernet and IEEE 1394 ("FireWire"). Early frame grabbers typically had only enough memory to store a single digitized video frame, whereas many modern frame grabbers can store multiple frames.

Modern frame grabbers often are able to perform functions beyond capturing a single video input. For example, some devices capture audio in addition to video, and some devices provide, and concurrently capture frames from multiple video inputs. Other operations may be performed as well, such as deinterlacing, text or graphics overlay, image transformations (e.g., resizing, rotation, mirroring), and conversion to JPEG or other compressed image formats. To satisfy the technological demands of applications such as radar acquisition, manufacturing and remote guidance, some frame grabbers can capture images at high frame rates, high resolutions, or both.