The SSIS698 4K Reducing Mosaic Top combines optical reducing technology with a high-density mosaic surface to deliver crisp 4K imagery, minimized distortion, and improved color uniformity for professional imaging and display systems.
Security cameras often use high compression to save storage. When law enforcement needs to zoom in on a license plate or a face, the mosaic effect makes evidence useless. The SSIS698’s reducing mosaic top algorithm can recover readable text from what looks like a pixelated mess.
At its core, the SSIS698 is a dedicated image signal processor (ISP) chip designed specifically for 4K ultra-high-definition pipelines. Unlike generic GPU-based denoising, the SSIS698 uses a hardware-level approach to pixel reconstruction. It was originally engineered for medical imaging and satellite reconnaissance, where losing a single pixel to a compression mosaic is not an option.
The "698" variant introduced a proprietary algorithm that separates static background data from moving foreground data at the bitstream level. This separation is critical because most mosaic artifacts appear due to temporal compression—where the codec assumes the next frame will look like the last one and saves space by only encoding the differences.
The SSIS698 4K Reducing Mosaic Top combines optical reducing technology with a high-density mosaic surface to deliver crisp 4K imagery, minimized distortion, and improved color uniformity for professional imaging and display systems.
Security cameras often use high compression to save storage. When law enforcement needs to zoom in on a license plate or a face, the mosaic effect makes evidence useless. The SSIS698’s reducing mosaic top algorithm can recover readable text from what looks like a pixelated mess. ssis698 4k reducing mosaic top
At its core, the SSIS698 is a dedicated image signal processor (ISP) chip designed specifically for 4K ultra-high-definition pipelines. Unlike generic GPU-based denoising, the SSIS698 uses a hardware-level approach to pixel reconstruction. It was originally engineered for medical imaging and satellite reconnaissance, where losing a single pixel to a compression mosaic is not an option. The SSIS698 4K Reducing Mosaic Top combines optical
The "698" variant introduced a proprietary algorithm that separates static background data from moving foreground data at the bitstream level. This separation is critical because most mosaic artifacts appear due to temporal compression—where the codec assumes the next frame will look like the last one and saves space by only encoding the differences. The SSIS698’s reducing mosaic top algorithm can recover