Take a brief glimpse from 1990 on the technology behind Dolby Surround and how it moved from Cinema to Home. Taken from Laserdisc "Dolby Technologies, How They Work".
In the late 90's, JVC introduced a high definition tape format known as DVHS. You could play your old VHS tapes, record HDTV, and watch 1080i DTheater movies.
This is the first 9 minutes of a video I created on the last day of school at Northwest High School in 1988. It was recorded on an RCA VHS Camcorder and edited in a professional video studio. Parts 2 and 3 also available. Order your copy on DVD, just message me!
A clip from the 143rd anniversary reenactment of the first big battle of Price's Raid held at Fort Davidson State Historic Site September 22, 2007 in Arcadia Valley Missouri. A reminder that many died for our freedom.
This clip introduces CD-i video from Philips. The first digital home video disc system (before DVD) was also a lame game system, introduced just before Playstation. The concept was cool, but didn't take off due to a lack of cool games.
Sculptor Korczak Ziolkowski and Lakota Chief Henry Standing Bear officially started Crazy Horse Memorial June 3, 1948. The Memorial's mission is to honor the culture, tradition and living heritage of North American Indians. Taken from a Laserdisc titled "Special Reports Television". The disc was used in doctors office waiting rooms.
README! After viewing the titles, you can use your play, pause, and scroll bar controls to view an entire catalog of laserdisc titles, with description, from 1992. Due to compression, the descriptions are not always readable. There are a ton of movies on laserdisc!
This is PART 2 of a video I created on the last day of school at Northwest High School in 1988. It was recorded on an RCA VHS Camcorder and edited in a professional video studio. Parts 1 and 3 also available. Order your copy on DVD, just message me!
This well produced clip shows the exciting features of Microsoft's next OS following 98. Too bad this operating system was a joke. This clip was seen upon installation, and yes, I used ME too :).
This was the fanfare intro often seen on the RCA Video Disc system of the 80's just before each movie. These discs were actually video records read with a stylus! This has been cleaned up and enhanced for your viewing pleasure.