pr0n has driven all forms of mass communication, from the scrawlings on walls in ancient cities to the printing press through to all our wonderful technologies now. Imagine that.

--R

On 12/23/2010 10:04 AM, Max Dillon wrote:
Actually, what sealed the deal was pr0n.  That is also why Blu Ray has won, and
also why video over the internet exists and works so well.  I read about this in
a safe-for-work magazine several years ago.

-Max (why do I need to explain myself?)

________________________________
From: Ed Booher<edboo...@gmail.com>
To: Mercedes Discussion List<mercedes@okiebenz.com>
Sent: Thu, December 23, 2010 9:19:44 AM
Subject: Re: [MBZ] (SPAM?) Increasingly OT: Re: American Top Gear

On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 2:06 AM, Walt Zarnoch<zarnoch...@gmail.com>  wrote:

Now THAT is something! Laserdisc, better quality than original DVD, but
bigger.

What was that old vinyl record style video system RCA had? Anyone have one?
:p

Walt

Laserdisc, though on a plastic disc, was not digital. The RCA system,
Capacitance Electronic Disc (CED), and Laserdisc both were analog beasts.
CED was, quite literally, a video record. Inside the player was an arm that
sat on the disc and picked up the waveforms directly from the disc. Betamax
and VHS became the default format from that era not just because of size,
but because they were recordable. People could record a program to watch
later, and that sealed the deal.

On Wed, Dec 22, 2010 at 2:17 AM, Walt Zarnoch<zarnoch...@gmail.com>  wrote:
I'm glad laserdisc won out, or we'd be in the stone age still... Was all
before my time, but it helped shape life as I know it.

So the industry decided to try another disc that had been in development.
They were cheaper to produce, and allowed a higher profit margin. At least,
they would be cheaper to produce if they could get the volume up. So they
introduce Laserdisc, which is a mild technological step forward from CED.
It's still analog, and still the size of a record, but the arm that sat on
the disc has been replaced with a laser to read the changes in waveform
directly. Most people decided they would stick with VHS.

Note: Betamax, as a format, is still alive and strong today. It just is not
available in the consumer market any longer. Well, maybe not strong, digital
camcorders have started to erode that strength. But even as short a time as
3 years ago or so, all TV stations used Betamax corders.

EdB


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