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Video Production History. By:Kierra Jackson. First Microphone. In 1827, Sir Charles Wheatstone was the first person to coin the phrase "microphone.". First Motion Video.
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Video Production History By:Kierra Jackson
First Microphone • In 1827, Sir Charles Wheatstone was the first person to coin the phrase "microphone."
First Motion Video • The first television camera employed early versions of the cathode ray tube invented in 1897.The first motion video was made in 1889.The first eleven years of motion pictures show the cinema moving from a novelty to an established large-scale entertainment industry.
First Video In History • First video in History was made in 1896.
Kinetoscope • In 1891, the Edison company successfully demonstrated the Kinetoscope, which enabled one person at a time to view moving pictures.
Early Cameras • The first television camera employed early versions of the cathode ray tube invented in 1897.
First TV Show • In 1927 the first TV show was aired. It was a demonstration by Bell Telephone Labs and AT&T with contributions from various executives of these companies and a speech by the secretary of commerce, Herbert Hoover.
First Video Tape Recorder • In 1951, the first video tape recorder (VTR) captured live images from television cameras by converting the information into electrical impulses and saving the information onto magnetic tape.
Video Camera/Video Recording • The first demonstration of the video camera took place on April 14,1956.The Ampex Corporation used magnetic tape technology pioneered by German scientists during World War II to create the first video tape recorder, the Ampex VRX-1000, introduced in 1956.
First Commercial • The first commercially available video cassette recorder was the Sony Betamax, introduced in 1975.
RCA • RCA invented the first handheld mobile video production camera, the TK-44, in 1972.
First Digital Camera • The first DV camcorder was the Sony DCR-VX1000, introduced in 1995.
Information • The latter part of the 20th century made video production affordable for the average consumer, video equipment was once only accessible by professionals working in the TV industry.