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Electronic Video Recording, or EVR, was a film-based video recording format developed by Hungarian-born engineer Peter Carl Goldmark at CBS Laboratories in the 1960s. CBS announced EVR in October 1967. The 750-foot film was stored on a spool in a plastic cartridge. It used a twin-track 8.75 mm film onto which video signals were transferred by electron beam recording, one monochrome track in each direction of travel. Some EVR films had a separate chroma track in place of the opposite-direction monochrome track for color EVR films. The images stored on an EVR film were visible frames much like motion picture film, and were read by a flying-spot scanner inside an EVR player to be converted to a video signal to be sent to a television set. EVR was also released by CBS as a professional version for television broadcasting, called BEVR (Broadcast EVR). As a professional medium, the format offered extremely high quality. It was, however, quickly superseded by professional and consumer magnetic tape formats. ==External links== *(The quest for home video: EVR ) *(LabGuy's World page on EVR ) *(Photos of EVR ) *(EVR page on Total Rewind - the Virtual Museum of Vintage VCRs ) *(Demonstration film of EVR (circa 1969) ) ---- '' 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Electronic Video Recording」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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