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The History Of Video Production

The History Of Video Production . Video Recording . In the early days Film wasn’t very available for recording TV. First Cartoon.

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The History Of Video Production

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  1. The History Of Video Production

  2. Video Recording • In the early days Film wasn’t very available for recording TV.

  3. First Cartoon • The first animated picture was Humorous Phases of Funny Faces (1906) by J. Stuart Blackton. He was a newspaper cartoonist and one of the co-initiators of the Vitagraph Company. It was the most basic surviving instance of an animated film, and the first cartoon to apply the single frame method.

  4. The Praxinoscope • In 1877 Charles Emile Reynaud invented the Praxinoscope, a mirrored drum that gives the illusion of movement using strips of pictures.

  5. The Kinteoscope • In 1881 Thomas Edison designed the Kinetoscope, a kind of movie projector and ran a trial of a movie called 'Monkeyshines'

  6. Kinetoscope Parlor • A year after Thomas Edison's invention of the Kinescope the Holland Brothers opened the first Kinetoscope Parlor in New York. This was the first commercial exhibition of movies.

  7. The Cinematographe In 1895 Louis and AugusteLumiere patented Cinematographe, a device that could project movies to several spectators at the same time. December 28 1895 they presented the first commercial display of a movie to an audience, running 20 minutes, consisting of 10 short stories

  8. The Great Train Robbery • 'The Great Train Robbery' (1903) is considered to be the first real full length movie, the first narrative Western film with a storyline, and the first real smash hit.

  9. The First Video Game • In October 1958, Physicist William Hinginbotham created what is thought to be the first video game. It was a very simple tennis game, similar to the classic 1970s video game Pong, and it was quite a hit at a Brookhaven National Laboratory open house.

  10. First Color TV Show • This first color program was a variety show simply called, "Premiere." The show featured such celebrities as Ed Sullivan, Garry Moore, Faye Emerson, Arthur Godfrey, Sam Levenson, Robert Alda, and Isabel Bigley -- many of whom hosted their own shows in the 1950s.

  11. The First Camera • Alexander Wolcott invented the first camera and was patented in 1840. However, the principle of making pictures was created by Joseph NicephoreNiepce and in 1826; Charles and Vincent Chevalier in Paris created the first camera that could take photos. Then in 1827, the Frenchman Joseph Niepce managed to make a photographic image.

  12. The vhs tape • In the 1970’s Video production, resulting in the eventual creating of the Video Home System standard. However, during this time several other companies also made attempts to produce a television recording device, hoping the majority of the world.

  13. The First Music Video • The first music video on MTV was The Buggles' "Video Killed the Radio star It aired on August 1, 1981.

  14. The First Tape Recorder • The first tape recorder was made in 1878, when an American mechanic Oberlin Smith. He was inspired by a trip to Edison’s labs, and he started to think about recording telephone signals with a steel wire. This principal of a magnetic recording was rediscovered by a Danish inventor ValdemarPoulsen in 1898.

  15. The First Game Show • The first televised game show was actually in the United Kingdom and was broadcast on May 31, 1938. The show was called Spelling Bee and like most new TV games shows in that day, it started out as a game show broadcast on the radio.

  16. The First Digital Camera • The first digital camera was a gradual development. In the 1950s, the first video tape machines were created. The devices soon became a standard for the motion picture industry. The impact the creation of the first tape recorder had on television technology was monumental and--as video cameras and digital cameras still both use similar technology--the tape recorder began to make way for the digital camera. It is because of the advances in motion picture technology that the first digital camera was possible

  17. YouTube • YouTube was famously founded by the trifecta of Hurly, Chen, and Karim, three early employees of PayPal. On May 19, 2005, the first preview of the site was made available to the public. So seeing how today is YouTube's birthday, of sorts, I thought it might be fun to go back and look at the first YouTube video ever uploaded to the site. • So, without further ado, behold, a video titled, "Me at the zoo." It was uploaded to YouTube on April 23, 2005. The video depicts YouTube co-founder Jawed Karim at the San Diego Zoo chillin' with some elephants.

  18. The First Motion Picture • EadweardMuybridge used multiple cameras to assemble the individual pictures into a motion picture. (1887)

  19. The First Color Picture • Best known for his development of electromagnetic theory, Scottish physicist James Clerk Maxwell dabbled in color theory throughout his life, eventually producing the first color photograph in 1861. Maxwell created the image of the tartan ribbon shown here by photographing it three times through red, blue, and yellow filters, then recombining the images into one color composite.

  20. The first vcr • Sony came out with the first VCR for home use in 1975. It was called the Betamax. A year later, JVC introduced its VHS videocassette recorder. After a several-year battle, the VHS became the VCR standard. Sony began producing VHS recorders in 1988 and produced its last Betamax in 2002. The true first VCR was invented in 1956 and was the size of a piano. The VCR was invented in 1971 along with the dot-matrix, food processor and the liquid-crystal display The VCR that we see these days was invented in 1970.

  21. The first animated film • 1906 J. Stuart Blackton'sHumorous Phases of Funny Faces was released. It was a 3 minute short. It was on a plain black board. • http://movies.about.com/od/animatedmovies/a/history-animated-films.htm

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