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History of VideoTape - VHS
Videotape is a means of recording television pictures
and accompanying sound onto magnetic tape as opposed to movie
film. In virtually all cases, a helical scan video head rotates
against the moving tape, because video signals have a very high
bandwith, and static heads would require extremely high tape
speeds. Video tape is used both invideo tape recorders (VTRs
or, more common, video cassette recorders (VCRs)) and video
cameras. Tape is a linear method of storing information, and since
nearly all video recordings made nowadays are digital, it is
expected to gradually lose importance as non-linear/random access
methods of storing digital video data are becoming more common.
History
Professional and broadcast use
Open reel
The first practical professional videotape machines were the Quad
machines introduced by Ampex in the United States in 1956. Quad
employed a helical scan system on a two-inch (5 cm) tape. The BBC
experimented with a high-speed linear videotape system called VERA
but this was ultimately unsuccessful, and all subsequent videotape
systems have used helical scan.
Although Quad became the industry standard for 20 years, it had
drawbacks such as an inability to freeze pictures, and in early
machines, a tape could only reliably be played back using the same
set of hand-made tape heads, which wore out very quickly. Despite
these problems, Quad could produce excellent images.
Unfortunately, very few early videotapes still exist. The high
cost of early videotapes meant that most broadcasters erased and
reused them, and regarded videotape as simply a better and more
cost-effective means of time-delaying broadcasts than the previous
kinescope technology, which recorded television pictures onto
photographic film. However, some early broadcast videotapes have
survived, including The Edsel Show, broadcast live in 1957, and
1958's An Evening With Fred Astaire, the oldest color broadcast
videotape known to exist.
The next format to gain widespread usage was the 1"
C-format videotape. It introduced features such as shuttling and
still framing.
The first video cassettes
Then, in 1969, Sony introduced the first widespread video cassette
(prior formats had used open reels), the 3/4" composite U-matic
system, which it later refined to Broadcast Video U-matic or BVU.
Sony continued its hold on the professional market with its
ever-expanding 1/2" component video Betacam family
(introduced in 1982), which, in its digital variants, is still
among the market leaders. Panasonic had some limited success with
ist MII system, but never could compare to Betacam in terms of
market share.
Going digital
The next step was the digital revolution. Among the first digital
video formats Sony's D1, which featured uncompressed digital
component recording. Because D1 was extremely expensive, the
composite D2 and D3 (by Sony and Panasonic, respectively) were
introduced soon after. Ampex introduced the first compressed
component recording with its Ampex DCT series in 1992. Panasonic
trumped D1 with its D5 format, which was uncompressed as well, but
much more affordable. JVC developed the S-VHS-based D9 format,
which compresses video data in a way similar to DVCPRO.
For camcorders, Sony adapted the Betacam system with is Digital
Betacam format, later following it up with the more low-cost
Betacam SX and MPEG IMX formats, and the semiprofessional DV-based
DVCAM system. Panasonic used its DV variant DVCPRO for all
professional cameras, with the higher end format DVCPRO50 being a
direct descendant.
High definition
The introduction of HDTV production neccesitated a medium for
storing high resolution video information. In 1997, Sony bumped
its Betacam series up to HD with the HDCAM standard and its
higher-end cousin HDCAM SR. Panasonic's competing format for
cameras was based on DVCPRO and called DVCPRO HD. For VTR and
archive use, Panasonic expanded the D5 specification to store
compressed HD streams and called it D5 HD.
Consumer use
Home VCRs
The first domestic videocassette recorders were launched in the
early 1970s, but it was not until the Japanese systems, Sony's
Beta (1975) and JVC's VHS, were launched, that videotape moved
into the mass market, resulting in what came to be known as the
"format wars". VHS finally won, mainly due to its longer
recording time compared to Beta. VHS is still the leading consumer
VCR format, since its follow-ups S-VHS and D-VHS never caught up
on popularity. It has, however, lost the battle against the
nonlinear and disc based DVD, and will probably become obsolete in
the next few years.
Camcorders
In camcorders, however, the field was more diverse, with the first
formats to gain popularity being the 8mm video format (later
replaced by Hi8 and its DV hybrid relative Digital8) and VHS-C
(compact) tape. Now, MiniDV is the leading media for camcorder
use. However, consumer MiniDV VCRs did not really catch on. Sony
tried to introduce a new camcorder tape with MicroMV, but consumer
interest has been low. For high definition, the most promising
system seems to be the new MiniDV-based HDV.
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