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'''Norpak Corporation''' was a company headquartered in [[Kanata, Ontario]], [[Canada]], that specialized in the development of systems for television-based data transmission. In 2010, it was acquired by [[Ross Video]] Limited of [[Iroquois, Ontario|Iroquois]] and [[Ottawa]], [[Ontario]].<ref>http://www.rossvideo.com/about-ross/press-releases/2010/ross-acquires-norpak.html</ref>
'''Norpak Corporation''' was a company headquartered in [[Kanata, Ontario]], [[Canada]], that specialized in the development of systems for television-based data transmission. In 2010, it was acquired by [[Ross Video]] Limited of [[Iroquois, Ontario|Iroquois]] and [[Ottawa]], [[Ontario]].<ref>http://www.rossvideo.com/about-ross/press-releases/2010/ross-acquires-norpak.html</ref>


Norpak developed the [[NABTS]] (North American Broadcast Teletext Standard) protocol for [[teletext]] in the 1980s, as an improved version to the then-incumbent [[World System Teletext]], or WST, protocol. NABTS was designed to improve graphics capability over WST, but required a much more complex and expensive decoder, making NABTS somewhat of a market failure for teletext. However, NABTS still thrives as a data protocol for embedding almost any form of digital data within the [[Vertical Blanking Interval|VBI]] of an analog video signal.
Norpak developed the [[NABTS]] (North American Broadcast Teletext Standard) protocol for [[teletext]] in the 1980s, as an improved version to the then-incumbent [[World System Teletext]], or WST, protocol.<ref>{{Cite web|last=April 2003|first=TVTechnology 01|title=Norpak steady as she goes with data encapsulation|url=https://www.tvtechnology.com/news/norpak-steady-as-she-goes-with-data-encapsulation|access-date=2021-02-12|website=TVTechnology|language=en}}</ref> NABTS was designed to improve graphics capability over WST, but required a much more complex and expensive decoder, making NABTS somewhat of a market failure for teletext. However, NABTS still thrives as a data protocol for embedding almost any form of digital data within the [[Vertical Blanking Interval|VBI]] of an analog video signal.


Norpak's products, now part of and complementary to the Ross Video line, include equipment for embedding data in a television or video signal such as for [[closed captioning]], [[Extended Data Services|XDS]], [[V-chip]] data, non-teletext [[NABTS]] data for closed-circuit data transmission, and other data protocols for VBI transmission.
Norpak's products, now part of and complementary to the Ross Video line, include equipment for embedding data in a television or video signal such as for [[closed captioning]], [[Extended Data Services|XDS]], [[V-chip]] data, non-teletext [[NABTS]] data for closed-circuit data transmission, and other data protocols for VBI transmission.

Revision as of 08:30, 12 February 2021

Norpak
IndustryData Transmission
Defunct2010 (2010)
FateAcquired by Ross Video Limited
Headquarters,

Norpak Corporation was a company headquartered in Kanata, Ontario, Canada, that specialized in the development of systems for television-based data transmission. In 2010, it was acquired by Ross Video Limited of Iroquois and Ottawa, Ontario.[1]

Norpak developed the NABTS (North American Broadcast Teletext Standard) protocol for teletext in the 1980s, as an improved version to the then-incumbent World System Teletext, or WST, protocol.[2] NABTS was designed to improve graphics capability over WST, but required a much more complex and expensive decoder, making NABTS somewhat of a market failure for teletext. However, NABTS still thrives as a data protocol for embedding almost any form of digital data within the VBI of an analog video signal.

Norpak's products, now part of and complementary to the Ross Video line, include equipment for embedding data in a television or video signal such as for closed captioning, XDS, V-chip data, non-teletext NABTS data for closed-circuit data transmission, and other data protocols for VBI transmission.

References

  1. ^ http://www.rossvideo.com/about-ross/press-releases/2010/ross-acquires-norpak.html
  2. ^ April 2003, TVTechnology 01. "Norpak steady as she goes with data encapsulation". TVTechnology. Retrieved 2021-02-12.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)