Connect with us

Popular Science

How to Make a YouTube Video in 1987

Decades before software like Premiere and iMovie made video editing cheap, easy, and accessible for everyone, the only option was chaining a conglomerate of vintage 80s technology – multiple camcorders or VCRs and a TV – to craft custom analog video. Then the Videonics system changed tech history forever. With professional-grade setups costing up to…

Published

on

Decades before software like Premiere and iMovie made video editing cheap, easy, and accessible for everyone, the only option was chaining a conglomerate of vintage 80s technology – multiple camcorders or VCRs and a TV – to craft custom analog video. Then the Videonics system changed tech history forever.

With professional-grade setups costing up to six figures at the time, the Videonics brought simple editing to the masses at a tiny fraction of the price… in theory. The reality of the Videonics video editing system was a jumbled mess of retro tech that took a near-miracle to make your kid’s 8th grade jazz band concert video look a little more polished.

And getting it all to work over 35 years later? It took 8 VCRs, 2 camcorders, 3 Videonics units and 4 remotes to create a 1987-era YouTube masterpiece. But in the end, it revealed the beauty and drive of the first-generation analog filmmakers and videographers who made YouTube possible for all of us.

GummyRoach:
Weird Paul:
TechnologyConnections:

#retrotech #analog #vhs #filmmaking

Continue Reading
Advertisement
110 Comments

110 Comments

  1. @Capturing-Memories

    November 8, 2024 at 3:16 pm

    The fact that 8 random VCRs were all set to low speeds this tells you how much people cared about video quality back in the day.

    • @SlyPearTree

      November 8, 2024 at 4:27 pm

      And they’d make copies of copies of copies at those speed…

    • @jrmcferren

      November 8, 2024 at 6:29 pm

      The quality loss was not noticeable by most people, especially when recording off of TV, the recording time was considered more valuable.

    • @U.S.A.

      November 8, 2024 at 6:29 pm

      I didn’t even know and didn’t noticed back then that it’s gonna be worse quality, all I cared about is that I could record 6 hours of movies onto a 2 hours cassette.

  2. @xaulted1

    November 8, 2024 at 3:18 pm

    I haven’t heard the word “yuppies” in a very long time. Doubtful most of YouTube even knows what that means.

  3. @Honir4

    November 8, 2024 at 3:26 pm

    cool

  4. @stevendembo2389

    November 8, 2024 at 3:28 pm

    Thank you for your channel!

  5. @xliquidflames

    November 8, 2024 at 4:29 pm

    1987? Wow. I was born in 1982. This tech feels more recent. I remember renting videos and using full VHS camcorders, not the VHS-C or others, in the late 90s. In fact, I still have a bunch of VHS-C tapes I filmed. I’m a lifelong Florida native and I was a pizza delivery driver the year we had the most hurricane landfalls in one season. So, I borrowed my mom’s VHS-C camcorder to film all the destruction I was seeing while I was out delivering pizzas. That was 2004! 1987 feels like too long ago for this tech. What a great video, though. It really brought back a bunch of memories for me. My family got a Packard Bell computer in the 90s. It had Windows 3.11. It came with a game demo CD. It had a game on it called VidGrid. It was this slider puzzle game. But the puzzles were music videos. So you had to solve the slider puzzle while the video was playing. One of those videos was Peter Gabriel’e Sledgehammer. I haven’t thought about VidGrid in decades.

    • @xliquidflames

      November 8, 2024 at 4:35 pm

      Yeah, I’m old. Get over it. Lol

  6. @katsemo

    November 8, 2024 at 4:31 pm

    Kevin out there sacrificing his own sanity for us ❤ everyone, after me: THANK YOU, KEVIN!

  7. @pootca

    November 8, 2024 at 4:51 pm

    Did Kevin lose the password to Vsauce 2?

  8. @RolandHazoto

    November 8, 2024 at 5:31 pm

    The best universal remote I ever used was an original phat PSP (the one with the IR blaster) and homebrew that let you make your own remote GUI.

    • @RisingRevengeance

      November 8, 2024 at 5:49 pm

      PSP with custom firmware was such a beast, it did practically everything you could want.

    • @bensmith5262

      November 8, 2024 at 6:21 pm

      Why on earth did the PSP have an IR blaster? It’s a handheld!

    • @RisingRevengeance

      November 8, 2024 at 6:39 pm

      @@bensmith5262 It was probably intended for some basic data transfer. For some reason it was very common on phones at the time too.

    • @RolandHazoto

      November 8, 2024 at 6:49 pm

      @@bensmith5262 probably because Gameboy Color had it first

    • @bensmith5262

      November 8, 2024 at 7:51 pm

      @@RisingRevengeance oh yeah! I totally forgot ir was an actual data transfer method for a few years.

  9. @jabaro2

    November 8, 2024 at 5:34 pm

    If the early videos weren’t for uploading to YouTube, what were people doing with all those analog videos on VHS?

  10. @Viscount

    November 8, 2024 at 5:54 pm

    Awesome. Reminds me of trying to do stop motion animation on a handheld… the times i had…

  11. @ScottGrammer

    November 8, 2024 at 5:56 pm

    Dude, I had one of those Videonics rigs back in the day! I think I paid $400 for it brand new? I got it to work – sort of – and control the VCR’s – sort of – but was never able to use it for anything worthwhile. They were a royal pain in the butt.

  12. @spinjector

    November 8, 2024 at 6:05 pm

    Ok you made it, now how does anyone view it..??? 😆

  13. @gummyroach

    November 8, 2024 at 6:17 pm

    Very nicely done!

    • @SDRIFTERAbdlmounaim

      November 9, 2024 at 11:48 am

      what are the chances of meeting about gummy roach besides you ?

    • @fungo6631

      November 9, 2024 at 1:32 pm

      You must be blind, the video is in 30 FPS.

      For something talking about analog video that’s an unacceptable oversight.

    • @tarstarkusz

      November 9, 2024 at 2:28 pm

      No, he’s a big dummy who never heard of Amiga.

    • @Zer0InfinityLIVE

      November 10, 2024 at 5:31 am

      Thank You for helping out with this project!!!😺💖👍

    • @tarstarkusz

      November 10, 2024 at 10:47 am

      No, it’s wrong. He apparently has never heard of the Commodore Amiga. Unlike other low cost computers of the time, the Amiga could use a genlock to overlay graphics and fonts and other special effects right out of the box (plus a genlock).
      Of course, all this is ignoring the fact that most big youtubers are using professional grade equipment. He’s using consumer grade stuff in this video. He is massively overstating the difficulties.

  14. @MossCoveredBonez

    November 8, 2024 at 6:20 pm

    Kind of love the design of the JVC GR-C7

  15. @chaquator

    November 8, 2024 at 6:31 pm

    instead of ordering more remotes you might want to look into flipper zero to emit any ir pattern you program

  16. @ddturnerphd

    November 8, 2024 at 6:40 pm

    Another awesome insight into how far we’ve come.

  17. @domramsey

    November 8, 2024 at 6:50 pm

    The reason you couldn’t find these things is because nobody used them. I made an edited VHS videos at this time. Firstly, it’s pretty easy to do basic editing by using the record & pause functions on the recording player. And you can use the camcorder itself as the source player. For titles & graphics, there were a myriad of video titlers out there, but many people like me used an Amiga. It was ideal because it could be used as a genlock to overlay the Amiga’s picture on the video and record the output. This is why the Amiga was used as the basis for the Video Toaster later.

    The whole process was pretty easy and pretty cheap. You definitely didn’t need any fancy control units and you could do some pretty accurate editing with judicious use of the pause button on the VCR.

    I know you can only make videos on things that have appeared in Popular Science, and this device is quite interesting, but your narrative is a bit off, suggesting people were spending many thousands on these devices. I actually did my own version of The Terminator (starring my cat) using my Panasonic camcorder, a basic VHS recorder and my Amiga. It was terrible, but I did it!

  18. @joewilson5452

    November 8, 2024 at 6:59 pm

    There was a little square cutout on the recording side of a commercially recorded VHS tape that would prevent the consumer from recording over the tape. We used to put a piece of electrical tape over the hole and then we could rerecord over the tape.

    • @michaelhenrici

      November 8, 2024 at 8:10 pm

      For some reason my copy of Superman: The Movie didn’t have the tab removed and I accidentally recorded over part of the opening as a kid.

  19. @pootcargo

    November 8, 2024 at 7:02 pm

    This man is speaking some sort of alien language, I don’t understand a thing.

  20. @elainebenes7971

    November 8, 2024 at 7:06 pm

    I used to have an Android phone with an IR blaster. With software you can send any command you want. Im sure you could use some homebrew hardware for this too.

    • @marsilies

      November 8, 2024 at 8:20 pm

      The Logitech Harmony Remote Controls also have a vast library of remote control commands

  21. @elainebenes7971

    November 8, 2024 at 7:17 pm

    Old VCRs couldnt stop on an exact frame. You might get within a second or two. This device cant edit at the quick pace of a youtube video. Still that was impressive.

  22. @blurglide

    November 8, 2024 at 7:40 pm

    People bought camcorders thinking it’d be like watching a movie. I’d wager 95% of camcorder recordings were never watched more than once. What’s interesting though is AI. Perhaps soon we can upload all this old video and AI can “enhance” it and edit it into something interesting.

  23. @aL3891_

    November 8, 2024 at 7:47 pm

    What a marvelous hack, using the ir sensor to control the vcrs and discovering the codes using a vhs tape, i love it 😄

    Amazing video as always Kevin, popular science got the deal of the century

  24. @thej3799

    November 8, 2024 at 8:04 pm

    I am really loving this channel more and more with each video.

    I think the first one I saw was the digital butler, and most recently was the polovision, which was an amazing video. This one is great, too. I hope you keep going.

  25. @marsilies

    November 8, 2024 at 8:27 pm

    You didn’t necessarily need two VCRs to create an edited tape, if you used the camcorder to playback the source. My family had a camcorder that used a full-size VHS tape back in the mid 80s, and our VCR had a front panel that flipped down to show a myriad of controls. My parents edited some Christmas footage together and dubbed over a Christmas song to make a custom music video, back in the 80s. My older sister also edited together a video presentation for a class project, and even made a few short films. Doing video overlays wasn’t possible though. Another bonus of having a full-size VHS tape camcorder was that we paired it with a 5″ B&W portable TV, plugged both into the cigarette lighter in the car, and us kids could watch movies in the backseat on long car trips, about a decade before portable DVD players came along.

  26. @dan2800

    November 9, 2024 at 12:51 pm

    weird paul time traveler confirmed

    • @weirdpaulp

      November 9, 2024 at 2:16 pm

      I’m simply only a man

  27. @sirflimflam

    November 9, 2024 at 12:53 pm

    Funny. I have owned 3, maybe 4 separate VCRs over the course of my life. All of them had a speed control somewhere on the unit itself.

  28. @captainsemicolon

    November 9, 2024 at 12:56 pm

    There is no such CPU as the Intel 80166. Do you mean the 80186? Edit: According to some sources it uses the NEC V40 which is a 80186 clone

  29. @thumbtak123

    November 9, 2024 at 1:01 pm

    You need a Flipper Zero, or a M5 CardComputer. The flipper would most likely work with any device, you have the codes for, on an IR, and the m5 card computer, might do this. You can find databases for the remotes online and if it has it, you can usually find all of the buttons someone recorded. You can also ask the community to submit a capture of a remote, if they do not. This will help with future projects, when you run into this issue.

  30. @aronrouzaut

    November 9, 2024 at 1:04 pm

    the watermark at the end

  31. @fungo6631

    November 9, 2024 at 1:31 pm

    Why didn’t you even bother to upload the video at 60 FPS?

    For a popular science channel, that was a very dumb mistake, and anyone with minimal science literacy would know that video was not 30 FPS back then but 60 FPS. You should had hired VWestlife to do this video, he knows much better how analog video is supposed to be digitized than your dumb a55 does.

  32. @nevadaxelizabeth

    November 9, 2024 at 1:41 pm

    now, you should try making a video with the videotoaster.

  33. @weirdpaulp

    November 9, 2024 at 2:33 pm

    Thanks for the shoutout! Music videos were one of my biggest influences. Even back then, I never heard of DirectED Plus!

  34. @Tom_Oliver_89

    November 9, 2024 at 2:55 pm

    yay weird paul 27:48

  35. @misterskippy2u

    November 9, 2024 at 3:10 pm

    “The Nondescript Magic Brick” would have been a great tag line for a DirectED advertising campaign!

  36. @pierdeer

    November 9, 2024 at 3:38 pm

    So happy to see one of these units in action after so many years. I collect some old AV gear myself and over the years saw the DirectED a lot on eBay. But the fact that you needed a video tape to feed the software to it, to make it usable in the first place, always scared me off. I always understood it being solely a device that does cleaner editing cuts … and that’s it, so I never considered getting one myself. But seeing how you struggled with it, probably for the best haha. Great video!

  37. @AnonymousFreakYT

    November 9, 2024 at 3:44 pm

    16:03 – OMG, that RCA remote! That is the *EXACT* remote I had for my VCR in college! (Goodwill purchased VCR with no remote, because college student, so I bought that remote at Walgreens or something.)

  38. @cocusar

    November 9, 2024 at 4:23 pm

    it probably requests to rewind the tape to its beginning every time it lays a new segment into the “record only” VCR is because it can’t determine in which position of the tape it is, but it surely can count frames (or time them). It’s true that it could technically record sequential segments without asking you to rewind. I think it is a good tradeoff. What I can’t think of a better explanation is the UI/UX, and the probable lack of a TBC (see the shaky image when fast forwarding or rewinding). And I think it’s an 80186, not 80166, but I might be wrong.

  39. @lochinvar00465

    November 9, 2024 at 5:03 pm

    The problem of dubbing macrovision tapes hit me, but in a different way.Mine was trying to go from DVD player through a VCR to the TV. My setup is used so the ether DVD or VCR is source without switching source on the TV. The solution is simple, with a video stabilizer between the DVD output and VCR video input. Tho it could be used to copy DVD to tape, it is not used for that. It could also be used for VCR to VCR recording as it “strips off” macrovision from the video stream. Popular Electronics even had an article describing how to build one yourself, and you could also buy them(mail order) from ads in electronics magazines.

  40. @DarkHorseSki

    November 9, 2024 at 5:03 pm

    I had a Commodore Amiga, so the video toaster was an obvious add.

  41. @somepoliticalgamer6459

    November 9, 2024 at 5:17 pm

    May I give you a lead on a possible video for your channel? The first battery operated “tool” was made by black and decker in 1963. It was a battery operated lawnmower. I only know about this because I gave the man that designed it, 96 year old Steve Unger, a Lyft ride from the bar last night.

  42. @Scrumpetsheep

    November 9, 2024 at 5:27 pm

    I found a vidionix at a goodwill. It is a shitshow trying to get it to do ANYTHING

  43. @olsonspeed

    November 9, 2024 at 5:52 pm

    I suffered through this technology back in the day, recreating the misery is too much like refining your own gasoline.

  44. @warrior3456_

    November 9, 2024 at 6:53 pm

    Now days kids dont know what a vcr is I had to explain what one was to my cousin shes 16

  45. @JDWatkins

    November 9, 2024 at 6:56 pm

    Nope….. We used Sony HI-8 and Kodak Video Toaster. All editing was done on the Sony HI-8 editing system. Basically looked like a computer with 2 HI-8 systems in it. Master on left edit on the right side.

  46. @theultimatebionicfly

    November 9, 2024 at 6:59 pm

    I was a teenager in 80’s Australia and I love seeing your videos of tech from that decade because it was pretty much unattainable for most of us down here because of price and rarity. Keep up your great work.

  47. @CapablePimento

    November 9, 2024 at 7:25 pm

    Kevin, were you worried about being surrounded by tens of thousands of dollars in video equipment? What if there’s a break in?

  48. @KK4CNM

    November 9, 2024 at 7:31 pm

    Oh wow we had one of these, it was SO HARD TO USE!

  49. @Deltawhiskeymike

    November 9, 2024 at 8:28 pm

    (*every VCR clock was blinking 12:00/except for the “Zenith and it’s remote LoL)

  50. @Joseph_Tackett

    November 10, 2024 at 8:27 am

    Uh. I was born in the 90s…

  51. @Joseph_Tackett

    November 10, 2024 at 8:30 am

    Shoot, video editing is almost fun today. A great video takes unrealized amounts of editing.

  52. @lehpares

    November 10, 2024 at 8:50 am

    Hahahaha! I kept laughing as you go stacking more and more vintage electronics through the entire video. Nice piece. Reminded me of my childhood when record TV shows on VHS tape was an integral part of an 80’s kid duties.

  53. @typerightseesight

    November 10, 2024 at 8:54 am

    In like 2003 we used to make skate videos like they did in the early 90s with 2 vhs cassette tapes and I honestly cant remember how we did it. Like we would plug one into the other and hit play while we recorded. edit: and in the 90s i used to make stop motion movies with action figures. lol play stop play stop ect

  54. @chickenduckhappy

    November 10, 2024 at 11:07 am

    You’re not selling your new setup very well. It all seems unwieldy and cumbersome, and I do not particularly like the video quality, or that of the “kamcoder” or wossname’s built-in internal mike. 3 out of 10!

  55. @bulletproofblouse

    November 10, 2024 at 11:52 am

    The Videonics logo and the Homestar Runner Videlectrix logos look similar…

  56. @TimmyM

    November 10, 2024 at 12:33 pm

    If you can’t make it in Davinci Resolve or anything other than Premiere, it’s not worth the watch. Traitor.

  57. @benjaminniemczyk

    November 10, 2024 at 1:51 pm

    Nice video, but I don’t think there is any connection between nonlinear editing, youtube and this device. I worked in television in the 80s, when Avid was emerging, and a more accurate timeline is: analogue editing with console and two decks, Edit Droid, nonlinear editing via Avid or similar software, Adobe/Final Cut. But even those did not lead directly to youtube. Rather, digitizing and phones did. Professional-type setups were not common in the early days of youtube, but as they crept in, they became the norm.

  58. @TSBII

    November 10, 2024 at 2:06 pm

    WOW, the actual edit at the end did need some NLE love as you said in the beginning!!
    A Logitech programmable remote may have done the trick on those VCR’s missing their remote though.

  59. @guaposneeze

    November 10, 2024 at 2:13 pm

    1987 was a bit of a weird moment. The Video Toaster had been announced so people had seen it, but it wasn’t out yet. Like two years after the setting of this video, you could use an Avid and a Video Toaster to do all sorts of wacky video stuff with a Mac and an Amiga. You still needed to deal with tapes by the start of the 90’s, but just the last few years of the 80’s was a real shift from “I think this new tech may make some stuff theoretically possible” to basically the first version of totally modern tooling. Just insane how much stuff changed from year to year. At the start of 1987, Apple hadn’t released a Macintosh that could display color yet. By the end of 89, Avid on Mac doing real time video was a thing. Everything was obsolete in ten minutes.

  60. @memofromessex

    November 10, 2024 at 2:27 pm

    Another great video. Thanks!

  61. @angieandretti

    November 10, 2024 at 2:51 pm

    3:14 Intel 80186 CPU, not 166. Sorry but I cannot help it, I have to be “that guy.” Intel made the 8086, the 80286, 386, 486, Pentium (cuz they couldn’t trademark 586) … and the lesser-known 80186 which didn’t find its way into many computer systems like the others… but the rare “Mindset” computer was a notable exception. But they all end in 86, hence the term “x86 architecture.”

  62. @FuchsDanin

    November 10, 2024 at 3:35 pm

    Every time I watch videos like this I die a little inside. I have SO MUCH EXPERIENCE in consumer electronics between the 80s and now — I worked most of my life on consumer electronics repair. I could have provided options and insights for so many of these problems.

    Most VCRs default to the slowest speed; consumers liked the record times more than the quality. Unconfigured, they would be set to SLP. Most VCRs have button combos to change the speed during playback, which use buttons marked for other functions. Several of the ones you had will change speed without the remote. Similarly, on many VCRs you can adjust the tracking using the Channel + / – buttons while it’s playing.

    When looking for a remote, purchase a single Logitech Harmony 880 or similar. There’s an internet database which stores the names of every button learned, and programs your remote to control it. If the remote doesn’t have a physical button, there’s a screen with buttons to assign every single function to a written tag with a button next to it. There are tons of models of Harmony remote, but the 880 was the most reliable, is still readily available, and does the whole job. (I have ~6 of them, I’ll -donate- one to this channel if you contact me.)

    I can repair nearly any VCR; integrated-circuit level failures on those things are very rare, almost everything which fails is a generic component except for some mechanical items, but even those can be worked around with modern tools and enough experience. When it comes to VCRs, every single one you showed is “too new” — trust me when I say, the older VCRs are better, but you’ll likely need some minor repairs (belts, clutch pads, tape path cleaning, solder connections, capacitors in the power supply) to have them run in perfect shape.

    The “Library” tape is the editor device dumping its configuration data visually, which you didn’t mention and I thought was incredibly cool. Those frames are encoded binary data, reflecting the remote codes and learned behaviors the machine has acquired during setup — that’s why you don’t have to do the setup each time, and why you can resume a previous configuration with it. Further, with a digital recording of that data, it could IN THEORY be reverse engineered to allow one to self-program remote code sets for newer devices — likely the IR pulse patterns are encoded directly. With a digital recording of the important tapes, one could copy/clone them, or simply use an analog output on a computing device (Raspberry Pi 3 has a Composite output) to “bootload” the ED instead of relying on the tapes. I’d actually really love the opportunity to document that device, dump its ROMs and digitize the tapes, for posterity.

    I’m writing this the day after having watched the video, so I’m sure I’ve forgotten a few things I wished to mention, but I really want little more than to be a resource for videos like this. My knowledge doesn’t help anyone if it dies with me. I offer it freely. Please get in touch with me if you can. (I’m less interested in “general public” contact, but if I have time I’ll give it to a worthy ask.)

  63. @b6983832

    November 10, 2024 at 3:38 pm

    The obvious choice for a quality footage using 1987 technology would be 16 mm film. Of course, if you are speaking all the time, a camera with crystal sync would be needed. But for most videos shown in Youtube, this is not necessary. You could shoot a short documentary with a camera meant for newsreels. Theywere not with capability of making lip sync. Using 1980´a home video systems, such as VHS is just plain stupid. These were never used in any serious work those times. Television cameras were huge installations costing zillions those times.

  64. @Y0n3z

    November 10, 2024 at 4:10 pm

    i feel like id have better luck then with the 90 apps that only do half of a function i wasnt even looking for. analog is at least tangible.

  65. @Y0n3z

    November 10, 2024 at 4:13 pm

    lol 256kb you know there was baybatch bounce buffer overflow on that atleast enough to buy 4 more.

  66. @EricDarrell

    November 10, 2024 at 4:18 pm

    We had a DirectED in 1988 and even back then it was confusing and clunky. We have a few videos on our channel of us as kid actually using it. It’s cool to see a video about it as NOBODY remembers this thing.

  67. @Y0n3z

    November 10, 2024 at 4:23 pm

    ir codes are basic you could actully reverse brute force all the cmds with a cpl lines of script. you only usually need one master then its just order output in succession of measured voltage. pretty sure any phone what has a IR blastrr on it( which is a lot of them) could fix this with a button grid app that just out puts the desired frequency. fun fact sp and lp are the first considetred file extensions for video containing audio. even though it described its memory write speed not quality or anything just how its written onto magnetic surfaces.

  68. @TonyP9279

    November 10, 2024 at 5:11 pm

    I never understood why remotes would have an EJECT button on them. I mean, you’d have to go to the machine to physically remove the tape or DVD. I have one where the EJECT is the largest button on it, and right up there next to the power. Guess which button got pressed accidentally more often than others!

  69. @zackerychambers4638

    November 10, 2024 at 5:27 pm

    Nah, the remotes weren’t thrown away, they just disappeared into the black hole that is the couch cushions.

  70. @Jimyjames73

    November 10, 2024 at 5:37 pm

    Looks complicated – I’ll just use my Computer thanks in 2024 Thanks 😄🚂🚂🚂

  71. @bcataiji

    November 10, 2024 at 6:05 pm

    My VCR predates macrovision chips, so it is a non-issue.

  72. @CaelThunderwing

    November 10, 2024 at 6:45 pm

    The Remote problem is why i advocate for Preservation of these for second hand Resale of the various Period correct VCR’s/DVD players/Sound systems via a FlipperZero its not perfect but better than nothing.

  73. @doz3r943

    November 10, 2024 at 7:03 pm

    when you hear the vcr eat your tape 🤬

  74. @0326Hambone

    November 10, 2024 at 9:42 pm

    RCA, built in Indianapolis! I’m a native and thankfully got to see the old factory before it was demolished.

  75. @ChrisAguilera-q3l

    November 10, 2024 at 11:27 pm

    OMG That was my Zenith growing up. I loved that VCR. My dad bought a Betamax in the 80’s that was so big with a pop top. I loved that Zenith and I went through a lot of VCR’s but the quality with the exception of a JVC was second to none.

  76. @SpaciousGreen

    November 11, 2024 at 1:04 am

    You’ve sidestepped a significant era of video editing in the early 90s. Thanks to the debut of Quicktime came some add-on devices such as SuperMac VideoSpigot (1991) and Radius VideoVision Studio. Also in 1993, Apple (Steve Jobs absentee years) rolled out the Macintosh Centris 660AV capable of AV digitizing, albeit at a crudely downscaled size, of 240×180 if I remember it right. Barely even MPEG size. Later came a more robust Quadra 840AV, capable of S-video capture of 640×480. For indie filmmakers, of course the right choice was VideoVision Studio, which worked pretty well with Adobe Premiere. The only problem at that time was the limited codecs we had: either Apple Video, which was dog vomit, or Cinepak, slightly less so. The latter was the codec used for early trailers hosted on Apple’s own movie preview site.

  77. @lostinthemasses

    November 11, 2024 at 2:02 am

    Literally everything had a hotline in the 80’s and 90’s dude. Every single appliance would have a sticker on it with an 800 number.

  78. @lastnamefirstname8655

    November 11, 2024 at 2:32 am

    very interesting older tech! thanks kevin!

  79. @BrandonToy

    November 11, 2024 at 4:34 am

    I don’t think younger people appreciate how absolutely awesome YouTube is (it was even more awesome in some ways before Google bought it).

  80. @ClaudioMalagrino

    November 11, 2024 at 6:24 am

    I had a personal project of a “video magazine” in 1993. I used a VHS camcorder, a VHS-editing suite and paper-printed titles inserted via lumakey. I recorded myself with a lapel microphone in my room, and even interviewed people in the streets. I tried to distribute the program in video rental shops. It was totally rejected as a kind of heresy: “How dare you doing a TV program yourself?” Funny how people today accept more a home-made content than at the time. The problem wasn’t the program itself, but the lack of a distribution medium, something we would have only in the 2010s.

  81. @HappyQuailsLC

    November 11, 2024 at 6:39 am

    YouTube was launched to the public in 2005.

  82. @brandongovreau9218

    November 11, 2024 at 7:09 am

    is your company ever going to make a complete anniversary collection of popular science magazine The thing is I don’t know if that’s a good idea or not?

  83. @JacknVictor

    November 11, 2024 at 7:54 am

    Gummyroach looks exactly like the actor, Lane Smith.

  84. @AttilaSVK

    November 11, 2024 at 8:54 am

    I’m wondering if the initial dub is required so the DirectED can lay down some form of timecode to be able to find the source material… btw, the Panasonic NV-FS200 (known as the AG-1980 in the US) has a physical button for switching recording speed directly on the deck itself.

  85. @waynekinney3358

    November 11, 2024 at 10:24 am

    Hehe, I had one of these back in the 90’s. Bloody thing, all that tape rewinding each edit and edit is ‘out of sequence’. I also had a lot of the add on graphic tape libraries.

  86. @tlhIngan

    November 11, 2024 at 10:37 am

    Back in those ugly days, there were three ways of editing video – On-line, Near-Line and Off-Line (aka Non-Linear). Online video editing you edited live – the video comes in, you make your modifications to it and it goes out – think live events. Near-Line is what this is – you have a recording of your content and it needs to be spliced in the right spots, so you create a “cutlist” (or Edit Decision List) and the video is spliced from the playback units to the recorder. This method closely resembles the traditional film editing techniques. Today, computers are powerful enough that offline or non-linear video editing is how it’s done, where you take a list of video assets plop them on a timeline, and edit away. You’ve dumped all your video content on a machine and the machine plays it back with digital perfection, and navigating around is instantaneous. Near-Line systems the units would have to fast-forward or rewind based on timecodes to sync everything. This would be a home consumer near-line system which is highly advanced given there’s no way to timecode sync a VCR, there’s no genlock to synchronize frame generation (the Amiga was popular because its video output supported genlock, making it possible to do online editing).

  87. @Ron2600_

    November 11, 2024 at 12:31 pm

    We have a JVC form either the late 90s or early 2000s, and it has an SP/EP button right on the front of the deck. I didn’t know this was an uncommon feature.

  88. @Ron2600_

    November 11, 2024 at 12:39 pm

    I might be related to the co-founder. We have the same last name.

  89. @althejazzman

    November 11, 2024 at 2:13 pm

    Woah the pain of the final retro edited video shows just how hard it was to use. Seems truly impossible to get good edits.

  90. @35mmMovieTrailersScans

    November 11, 2024 at 2:23 pm

    Very deceiving product, I fail to see how it was better than “manual” editing which was taking notes of timings of clips on paper and pausing and unpausing the recording on your second VHS, I don’t see any advantages. When I started to watch your video I was expecting to see a technology that somehow helped getting over the very nasty picture distortion that a home vcr’s
    pause/unpause recording did to the picture but this machine was simply using the same pause/unpause of the recording vcr. When I was 14 years old in 1980 I had the chance, at school, to learn how to edit video with a professional 3/4″ U-Matic VCR with a tilted erasing head, you had to run both the source and the recording in advance of your cut in, wait a few seconds that the about-to-record VCR synced the video signal with the source then you press the cut-in just 1s (or was it 2s? that was a long time ago) before the actual cut as the tilted erasing head started to blank the space for flying heads to write on…. In the case you were doing an insert you also had to press the cut-out exactly 1s (or was it 2s?) before the actual end of your insert. I don’t think these features were ever present in home appliances. After doing this in school I never had any pleasure trying to edit videos on home vcrs, the school spoiled me.

    Only In 1998 did I found a very satisfying editing tool for your miniDV camera, it first captured your clips in low-resolution low-bandwith, let you do the edit and then when you wanted to render only then it would re-capture in full resolution by using the firewire protocols to control your miniDV camera. You then could save your end result on your MiniDV camera without any quality loss….

    But I can’t remember if this was the Pinnacle or the Dazzle, one of the two….

  91. @senilyDeluxe

    November 11, 2024 at 2:42 pm

    And then there’s James Rolfe who did all of that manually (he even knew how many frames of delay his VCRs had).

    Up until like 10 years ago, I could pull pretty much any make, model or vintage (even 70s if I dug deep enough) of VCR out of the e-waste pile. Now, all I see are modern ones that aren’t even from the last millennium. Luckily I have stacked them to my ceiling and have almost all of them in (more or less) working condition. Hey. I love analog video (and audio)! I sometimes even videotape YouTube.

    Most of my VCRs only record in SP (since I live in Europe, 50Hz means 4 hours per tape in SP and 8 hours in LP and we never got an SLP/EP mode) and most of the ones that do LP have the button ON THE MACHINE!
    Just one question, as a software engineer who been there done that –
    – WHY doesn’t the Videonics just ask you to press the buttons on the remote control of your VCR to learn them?
    Minor nitpick – the reason why the text is blurry at the top half of the screen is probably because your video grabber card was not set to VCR timebase. Some don’t have that feature, but most do.

  92. @ghostrider2664

    November 11, 2024 at 4:11 pm

    It’s interesting that you pick 1987. That year I was attending 7th grade at a magnet middle school that focused on media and communications. It had a full TV production studio. I mean the real stuff. The pro camera the big board and everything. We spliced tape by hand with razor blades. Yes a load of 7th graders with razor blades in their hands. I still have the VHS tape from those days. Somewhere in my parents house. So I do know of what you speak. You took me down memory lane man. And Mr Dills, if you’re out there, you are remembered.

  93. @AllanAdamson

    November 11, 2024 at 4:47 pm

    let’s go

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Popular Science

I Traveled 8,000 Miles For The Camera That Killed Polaroid

Nearly 50 years ago, the Polavision camera blended Polaroid’s revolutionary instant film with on-demand home video – and the result was a landmark advance in analog technology that would become a mystery of science and a winding international journey into vintage tech. Because now, generations after Edwin Land bet his half-century legacy of innovation and…

Published

on

Nearly 50 years ago, the Polavision camera blended Polaroid’s revolutionary instant film with on-demand home video – and the result was a landmark advance in analog technology that would become a mystery of science and a winding international journey into vintage tech.

Because now, generations after Edwin Land bet his half-century legacy of innovation and the company he founded on the success of the Polavision, I need to figure out how to get the thing to work… and only one man in the world could help me.

I traveled to Vienna, Austria to meet Florian “Doc” Kaps – the man behind ‘The Impossible Project’ that saved Polaroid from the dustbin of history. With his guidance and his private store of old Polaroid video tapes, perhaps I would be able to record a modern YouTube video with my vintage Polavision camera.

Through it all, Doc immersed me into his world of analog technology and the philosophy behind his mission to re-integrate analog into our daily lives. We cut lacquer records, we felt the fires of an analog restaurant, and we spent too much time trying to resurrect a relic of the past – because technology, vintage and modern, is all about people.

#polaroid #analog #vintagetech #history #cameras #documentary

Continue Reading

Popular Science

We Mapped a Fly’s BRAIN

A global team of 287 researchers have combined over 100 terabytes of data to create a full map of a fruit fly’s brain, which includes 139,255 individual neurons and 50 million connections. Popular Science, “Scientists mapped every neuron of an adult animal’s brain for the first time”: #science #sciencefacts #weirdscience #biology #research

Published

on

A global team of 287 researchers have combined over 100 terabytes of data to create a full map of a fruit fly’s brain, which includes 139,255 individual neurons and 50 million connections.

Popular Science, “Scientists mapped every neuron of an adult animal’s brain for the first time”:

#science #sciencefacts #weirdscience #biology #research

Continue Reading

Popular Science

What if you CAN’T BURP?!

Some people can’t burp… at all. It’s called Retrograde Cricopharyngeus Dysfunction, and RCD makes life seriously uncomfortable — both physically and socially. There’s an easy, increasingly popular medical fix that unlocks the power of the belch, and it’s actually changing lives. Popular Science: #medical #sciencefacts #science #scienceandtechnology

Published

on

Some people can’t burp… at all. It’s called Retrograde Cricopharyngeus Dysfunction, and RCD makes life seriously uncomfortable — both physically and socially.

There’s an easy, increasingly popular medical fix that unlocks the power of the belch, and it’s actually changing lives.

Popular Science:

#medical #sciencefacts #science #scienceandtechnology

Continue Reading

Trending