VHS: Difference between revisions
From WE Computers Museum
(add links and adjust bold) |
No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 13: | Line 13: | ||
==Competition== | ==Competition== | ||
It largely became the most popular | It largely became the most popular option against the competing analogue tape format, [[Betamax]]. | ||
Outside of Asia and Japan, it also was the dominant format against the competing digital optical formats, [[Laserdisc]] and [[Compact disc|Video CD]]. | Outside of Asia and Japan, it also was the dominant format against the competing digital optical formats, [[Laserdisc]] and [[Compact disc|Video CD]]. | ||
Line 19: | Line 19: | ||
It remained the dominant worldwide format until the release of the [[DVD]] in the late 1990s. | It remained the dominant worldwide format until the release of the [[DVD]] in the late 1990s. | ||
[[Category:1976 inventions]] | |||
[[Category:JVC inventions]] | |||
[[Category:Storage media]] | [[Category:Storage media]] |
Latest revision as of 07:06, 31 August 2024
VHS | |
Developer | JVC |
---|---|
Publisher | Various |
Systems | Action Max Battlevision Captain Power Interactive Vision Video Challenger Video Driver |
Released | JP: September 9, 1976 NA: August 23, 1977 |
Added to Museum | December 25, 1995 |
The Video Home System (VHS) is a standard for analogue video cassette recording.
It was developed by JVC and was first released in Japan on September 9, 1976, and in North America on August 23, 1977.
Competition
It largely became the most popular option against the competing analogue tape format, Betamax.
Outside of Asia and Japan, it also was the dominant format against the competing digital optical formats, Laserdisc and Video CD.
It remained the dominant worldwide format until the release of the DVD in the late 1990s.