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Overview""We do this not because it is easy, but because we thought it would be."" When I started this project, I thought my twenty-five years in the industry-from the legendary halls of Elstree Film Studios to providing technical support for the Sony PlayStation 3-would make it a quick win. I was wrong. What followed was over a thousand hours of exhaustive research and a deep dive into the ""Format Wars"" you've never heard of. This book is a technical autopsy of the physical formats that refused to vanish. I didn't just write this; Inside, you will explore: The Architecture of Resolution: Why 35mm became the standard that outlasted its rivals for over a century. The Road Not Taken: Forgotten experiments like the 17.5mm split-film and the 75mm Biograph gamble. The Digital Preservation Gap: How we moved from the infinite life of silver halide to the fragile, bit-rotting world of early digital storage. The book covers a vast history of physical video media, ranging from early chemical film formats to modern 8K digital standards. Based on the ""Table of Contents"" and technical ""autopsies"" provided, the book details over 50 specific formats and variants. Early Film & Large Gauge Formats 35mm: The primary standard for cinema. 70mm & 75mm Biograph: Early attempts at ""gigantism"" and spectacle in film. 17.5mm: A ""split-film"" experiment designed for education. 28mm & 9.5mm (Pathé Baby): Early consumer and middle-ground formats. 16mm & Super 16: Versatile formats used for news, television, and amateur filmmaking. 8mm & Super 8: The formats that popularized home movies. Widescreen & High-Fidelity Giants Cinerama (Three-reel system): A complex 1950s version of virtual reality. VistaVision & Todd-AO: High-resolution horizontal and wide-gauge film. IMAX (15/70) & IMAX Dome: The ultimate 70mm standards. Professional & Broadcast Videotape 2-Inch Quad: The format that first made television reruns possible. 1-Inch Type A, B, and C: Industrial and broadcast standards through the 60s and 70s. U-matic (Standard & Portable): The first successful video cassette format for professionals. Betacam Series: Including original Betacam, Betacam SP, Digital Betacam, and Betacam SX. MPEG IMX: A 2001 digital bridge for standard definition broadcast. Consumer Video Tape & The ""Format Wars"" VHS & VHS-C: The dominant consumer format and its compact camcorder variant. Betamax: The high-quality rival to VHS. Video 2000: A double-sided ""smart"" tape from Europe. Other Rarities: Including Cartrivision, V-Cord, VX, and CVC. Optical Discs & Hybrid Formats LaserDisc: The first commercial optical disc format, including 8-inch and 5-inch variants. VCD (Video CD) & SVCD: Digital video on standard compact discs. DVD & HD DVD: Successive generations of digital versatile discs. Blu-ray & Ultra HD Blu-ray: High-definition and 4K optical standards. Experimental/Niche: Including TeD, VHD, CED (and Interactive CED), CD-i, and VinylVideo. Mobile & Digital Frontier Game Boy Advance Video Pak: A proprietary cartridge format for handheld gaming. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Stephen DriverPublisher: Independently Published Imprint: Independently Published Dimensions: Width: 20.30cm , Height: 2.70cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 1.043kg ISBN: 9798244204070Pages: 532 Publication Date: 16 January 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationTab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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