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VHS TO DVD TRANSFER provides a professional VHS To DVD
Transfer service.
VHS TO DVD TRANSFER is the authority when it comes to VHS to DVD Transfer in the UK. We
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from the original tape source. VHS TO DVD TRANSFER is based in London, UK.
This service includes
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Digital re-mastering of your VHS
Tape
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Audio level balancing and enhancement
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Picture enhancement
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Audio converted to Dolby Stereo
The resulting video streams are authored and burned to DVD
. We can get as much as four hours on a single DVD with most customers
remarking that the resulting video is clearer, sharper and sounds better!
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The history of VHS Format a Sony Perspective
By 1976, the year following the launch of Betamax, the Vietnam War had ended
and North and South Vietnam were reunified. Sony celebrated its 30th
anniversary that year, and Morita proudly announced the birth of the post color
television era, the video age. The introduction of the home-use VCR had caused
the biggest stir and created the greatest expectations for Sony since the
launch of the Trinitron. Sony sales branches throughout Japan were buzzing
about Betamax, and how to launch it in their regions became their number one
priority. From the pre-launch stage, study sessions and training seminars
explaining how to connect a Betamax to a television were frequent. At that
time, however, annual domestic demand for VCRs was still less than 100,000
units. Morita was brimming with confidence when he made his announcement about
the upcoming video age. Would home-use VCRs become popular? The industry had
its doubts. At any rate, full-scale production of Betamax looked ready to roll.
However, in the same year, something happened which took Sony by surprise.
In September 1976, JVC announced the VHS-format VCR to compete head to head
against Betamax. With this announcement, the VCR format battle began. The JVC
product boasted two hours of recording time twice that of Betamax. The year
before the Betamax release, Sony had approached Matsushita and JVC, its two
partners for the U Format, about unifying product specifications. At that time,
Sony had disclosed information regarding the Betamax specifications and
technology to the two companies. In response, Matsushita and JVC delayed any
decisions about unifying standards for a year. After Sony announced the advent
of the video age and followed this with an aggressive sales drive, JVC began
its own highly effective advertising campaign.
Sony took a closer look at the VHS format and everyone was aghast. The
technology and know-how that Sony had willingly disclosed when it proposed the
unification of the U and Beta formats was incorporated in the VHS format.
Although Sony had freely given the two companies access to its basic, patented
technology, it was impossible for Sony to hide its shock and surprise.
Even though Sony's Beta format and JVC's VHS format were technologically
similar, the cassette sizes were different. The two were not compatible. The
fact that there was more than one format foretold a grueling struggle for
leadership in the home-use VCR market and a deepening fight for market share.
The last thing either side wanted was to inconvenience the user. But the VCR
war had begun and everyone was running for cover.
VIDEO Magazine, an American magazine for video enthusiasts, features a thorough
comparison of the VHS and Beta systems.
Sony and JVC each courted a group of companies throughout 1976. Matsushita, a
member of the U Format group, was ambivalent about where it stood. As the year
drew to a close, Morita and Kihara visited Konosuke Matsushita, an adviser to
Matsushita, at the company's head office in Osaka to receive a final decision
concerning format unification. Samples of the Sony and JVC products with their
lids removed were placed on the desk. Matsushita was forthright in his
position. He said, It pains me to have to reject Betamax, but the JVC product
has fewer components. My company must choose the product that can be
manufactured more cheaply, whether by 100 yen or 1000 yen per unit. That is the
only way to overcome the disadvantage of being a latecomer.
One can imagine how Morita and Kihara felt upon hearing these words. In the
end, Sony Toshiba, Sanyo Electric, NEC, Aiwa, and Pioneer supported Sony's Beta
format. Matsushita, Hitachi, Mitsubishi Electric, Sharp, and Akai Electric
accepted JVC's VHS format. The home electronics industry was thus divided into
two camps.
Of course, Sony had complete confidence in its Beta format for home-use VCRs.
Although the recording time was only one hour, the cassette size was smaller
and the image quality was clearly superior. Moreover, technology that enabled
two-hour recording while maintaining high picture quality had already been
developed. If possible, Sony wished to achieve unification under its basic
format. Toward this end, Sony continued working diligently to make prototype
equipment available to potential format partners.
Sony embarked on an aggressive strategy as the leader of the Beta camp. Both
groups released a continuous stream of new products. They worked furiously to
enhance picture quality, lengthen recording time, diversify product functions,
and improve operability.
By 1979, annual industry production of home-use VCRs in Japan had reached 2.2
million units, about eight times the volume produced in 1976. Although the
industry was divided into two distinct camps, the video age had clearly become
a reality.
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