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The HC-X1000 was released in 2014, with Panasonic claiming it to be the first camcorder capable of recording 4K at 60p/50p frame rates onto an SD card. [37] Unlike others in the HC range the HC-X1000 is a larger unit appearing closer in design to the AG-AC90 professional camcorder.
VHS-C is the compact variant of the VHS videocassette format, introduced by Victor Company of Japan in 1982, [1] and used primarily for consumer-grade compact analog recording camcorders.
The VX1000 was based on Sony's earlier VX1 (PAL) and VX3 (NTSC) Hi8 camcorders, which were similarly intended as "prosumer" models, targeted at both high-end consumer and low-end professional users. In the mid-1990s, Sony began to move away from Hi8 tape in favor of the emerging DV format, and as a result the VX3 and VX1 were discontinued in 1995.
Sony CCD-VX3 (also known as CCD-VX1 in PAL markets and in Japan) is a Hi-8 camcorder noteworthy for being the first handheld camcorder to feature trichroic imaging. It was released to the North American market in 1992 at a street cost of about US$3500.
V-by-One HS is an open standard developed by THine Electronics.Historically flat panel televisions used LVDS to transmit pixel data to the display panel, but due to higher resolution and expansion in color depth, televisions faced problems such as increasing numbers of twisted-pair cables and timing skew problems.
The VFX1 Headgear was developed in the early 1990s by Forte Technologies, Inc. of Rochester, New York.It was released in 1995 with an MSRP of US$695 and an average retail price of $599, and was sold in the US in retail stores including CompUSA and Babbage's.
The Yaesu VX series is a line of two sequences of compact amateur radio handheld transceivers produced by Yaesu.There is a line of ultra-compact lower-power dual-band (2 m and 70 cm) transceivers that started with the VX-1R and was later updated with the VX-2R and VX-3R.