Difference between revisions of "Optical Disc (First Generation)"

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Material substrate  i.e. how the thing works
 
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Recording vs. consuming ... spectrum of capabilities
  
  
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[[Category:Fall 2010]]
 
[[Category:Fall 2010]]
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=Interesting Conclusions=
  
 
=Works Cited=
 
=Works Cited=

Revision as of 15:47, 15 October 2010

The optical disc is a form of technology that first emerged in the late 1970s and progressively developed throughout the 80s and early 90s. The optical disc consists of a round plastic disc encoded with data through the use of pits on the disc's surface which are read by an infrared laser. The laserdisc, the first iteration of the optical disc format, was capable of audio and video playback through analog encoding. Subsequent iterations of first generation discs were capable of digital playback, but without the ability for video playback.

The commercial interests

Geography/regional development

Material substrate i.e. how the thing works

Recording vs. consuming ... spectrum of capabilities


LaserDisc

Laserdisc graveyard in the future

Video CD

Sony MZ1 MiniDisc Recorder

MiniDisc

Sony MZ1 MiniDisc Recorder
Cartridge Assembly
MiniDisc Trademark Logo

Interesting Conclusions

Works Cited