3. General
3.5
Presentation System overview
Advanced video processing
The E2 Presentation System is the most advanced video processing and presentation control system on the market today. The sys-
tem provides source selection, windowing, seamless switching, video effects and integrated control for professional presentations.
E2’s modular, scalable architecture allows the system to support a wide variety of show con
fi
gurations.
A word about Layers
A layer is an image display element stacked on top of another or a background. Within the E2 system, each mixer has two layers,
A
and
B,
and one
Background
layer. For complete
fl
exibility, each layer can be assigned to either
PIP
or
Key
functionality.
The
Background
layer has the lowest priority. Any input or inputs can be used as a background. This layer visually appears behind
all other PIPs and keys. The system can transition between two background sources.
PIP
layer appears over backgrounds and under other layers of higher priority. PIP effects include mixes, smooth moves, resizing,
adjustable aspect ratio, borders and drop shadows.
Key
layer also appears over backgrounds and under other layers of higher priority. Key effects include luminance keys, split keys
(key alpha or
fi
ll), invert keys and chroma keys (future release).
Image 3-1
A word about Destinations
Destination is a location where the user assigns the outputs.
We can consider three destination types:
•
Single/Multiple Screen Destination (e.g. one or more projectors)
•
AUX Destination (e.g. a monitor dedicated for camera adjustments)
•
An external processor Destination (e.g. ImagePRO-II).
There several rules that apply when de
fi
ning an Destination con
fi
guration. For details on destination setup procedures, please refer
to the chapter "Con
guration Menu > Adjustment > Destination Con
22
R5905948 E2 12/12/2014
Summary of Contents for Event Master E2
Page 1: ...E2 User s guide R5905948 00 12 12 2014...
Page 8: ...Table of contents 4 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 16: ...2 Safety 12 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 32: ...3 General 28 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 82: ...6 GUI orientation Image 6 8 78 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 94: ...6 GUI orientation Image 6 20 90 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 115: ...6 GUI orientation Image 6 37 Thumbnail view Image 6 38 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014 111...
Page 186: ...7 System Setup 182 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 192: ...8 Updating firmware 188 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 196: ...9 General operation example Image 9 3 192 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 213: ...9 General operation example Image 9 25 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014 209...
Page 216: ...9 General operation example 212 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 220: ...10 Maintenance 10 2 Process Overview Flow chart Image 10 2 216 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 281: ...10 Maintenance Disregard the heatsink from the spare kit R5905948 E2 12 12 2014 277...
Page 282: ...10 Maintenance 278 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 288: ...11 Environmental information 284 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 298: ...B Remote Control Protocol 294 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...
Page 299: ...C Troubleshooting C TROUBLESHOOTING R5905948 E2 12 12 2014 295...
Page 300: ...C Troubleshooting 296 R5905948 E2 12 12 2014...