Electronic Recording Of Pictures On Tape
RCA’s Video Tape Recording system unveiled December 1st is destined to change the process of making motion pictures.
RADIO CORPORATION OF AMERICA, on December Ist, unveiled for the public its system of videe tape recording — electronic recording of pictures on magnetic tape— which is destined to affect the future of motion pictures as it will television.
Video tape recording, or VTR, has many advantages over photographic processes and kinescope recording. With VTR it is possible to record electroni- cally on a strip of tape and reproduce therefrom pictures in motion in black- and-white and in color, with no inter- mediate steps such as film processing and negative printing. “This new development,” said RCA’s Brigadier General David Sarnoff, “obviously holds great promise for the motion picture industry.” It also has caused some concern among cinematographers and other Hollywood technicians who wonder if electronic picture recording will mean an end to their careers. Some in the film manufacturing business and the film processing laboratories also have speculated on the system’s ultimate effect on their business. You see, video picture tape requires no developing or printing; duplicating is a simple electronic step. And instead of the conventional motion picture film, narrow plastic tape, 44 inch in width, is used.
RCA’s Video Tape Recording system unveiled December 1st is destined to change the process of making motion pictures.
RADIO CORPORATION OF AMERICA, on December Ist, unveiled for the public its system of videe tape recording — electronic recording of pictures on magnetic tape— which is destined to affect the future of motion pictures as it will television.
Video tape recording, or VTR, has many advantages over photographic processes and kinescope recording. With VTR it is possible to record electroni- cally on a strip of tape and reproduce therefrom pictures in motion in black- and-white and in color, with no inter- mediate steps such as film processing and negative printing. “This new development,” said RCA’s Brigadier General David Sarnoff, “obviously holds great promise for the motion picture industry.” It also has caused some concern among cinematographers and other Hollywood technicians who wonder if electronic picture recording will mean an end to their careers. Some in the film manufacturing business and the film processing laboratories also have speculated on the system’s ultimate effect on their business. You see, video picture tape requires no developing or printing; duplicating is a simple electronic step. And instead of the conventional motion picture film, narrow plastic tape, 44 inch in width, is used.
https://archive.org/details/sim_amer...p?view=theater
Even Santa did not seeing it coming...
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