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Video History
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"Alaska Business License #
712765
We Accept
Home documentarians didn’t
drift significantly from film to video until about 1981. There are many reasons
for this switch, but the simple explanation is video technology had become
easier and less expensive than film and film devices to use for both recording
and playback. Other important factors contributed, but the focus of this
history is on video formats used in the home to document family activities and
adventures. I also give a brief overview of the chemical emulsion instabilities
of video tape that may cause you to decide to make digital copies of your older
home videos sooner rather than later.
Innovative improvements in
video technology began happening after World War II. The first practical video
tape recorder (VTR) was developed in 1951 and VTR technology become commercially
feasible with Ampex introducing the Quadraplex using 2 inch tape reels in 1956.
Sony began marketing the first reel-to-reel VTR designed specifically for home
use in 1964, but only a few hundred were ever sold. In 1969 Sony introduced
its
Color
Video player
,
which used a three-quarter inch videocassette tape and had a maximum playing
time of 90 minutes. Successful home-use video recorders didn’t get
introduced to consumers until 1975 and VTRs prior to 1969 were reel-to-reel
devices lacking suitability for home use.
Before 1967 there was no such
thing as man-portable out-of-studio video cameras. Home users who wanted to
document their parties and special events had to use 8mm or Super8 film and most
professional mobile and location work was done using 16mm film. Sony’s
introduction of the Portapak in 1967
inaugurated the modern era
of video. The Portapac"
....
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