thumb|The simultaneous PAL transmission of all TV-picture elements and the multiplexed transmission of the TV picture elements with D2-MAC. 300px|thumb|A preview of actual D2-MAC signal. From left to right: digital data, chrominance and luminance with teletext packets between fields. thumb|D2-Mac processing on a Philips satellite receiver from 1990 D2-MAC is a satellite television transmission standard, a member of Multiplexed Analogue Components family. It was created to solve D-MAC's bandwidth usage by further reducing it, allowing usage of the system on cable and satellite broadcast. It cou
thumb|The simultaneous PAL transmission of all TV-picture elements and the multiplexed transmission of the TV picture elements with D2-MAC. 300px|thumb|A preview of actual D2-MAC signal. From left to right: digital data, chrominance and luminance with teletext packets between fields. thumb|D2-Mac processing on a Philips satellite receiver from 1990 D2-MAC is a satellite television transmission standard, a member of Multiplexed Analogue Components family. It was created to solve D-MAC's bandwidth usage by further reducing it, allowing usage of the system on cable and satellite broadcast. It could carry four high quality (15 kHz bandwidth) sound channels or eight lower quality audio channels. It was adopted by Scandinavian, German and French satellite broadcasts (CNBC Europe, TV3 (Sweden), TV3 (Denmark), EuroSport, NRK 1, TV-Sat 2, TDF 1, TDF 2, etc.). The system was used until July 2006 in Scandinavia and until the mid-1990s for German and French sound channels.
== Technical details ==
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).