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  2. TEAC Corporation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TEAC_Corporation

    TEAC is known for its audio equipment, and was a primary manufacturer of high-end audio equipment in the 1970s and 1980s. During that time, TEAC produced reel-to-reel machines, cassette decks, CD players, turntables and amplifiers. TEAC produced an audio cassette with tape hubs that resembled reel-to-reel tape reels in appearance.

  3. TASCAM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TASCAM

    TASCAM is the professional audio division of TEAC Corporation, headquartered in Santa Fe Springs, California.TASCAM established the Home Recording phenomenon by creating the "Project Studio" and is credited as the inventor of the Portastudio, the first cassette-based multi-track home studio recorders.

  4. DA-88 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DA-88

    The DA-88 was a digital multitrack recording device introduced by the TASCAM division of the TEAC Corporation in 1993. This modular, digital multitrack device uses tape as the recording medium and could record up to eight tracks simultaneously. It also allowed multiple DA-88 devices to be combined to record 16 or more tracks. [1]

  5. Portastudio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portastudio

    In 2006, the TEAC Portastudio was inducted into the TECnology Hall of Fame, an honor given to "products and innovations that have had an enduring impact on the development of audio technology." [21] In 2021, in conjunction with TASCAM's 50th anniversary, a software plug-in emulation of the Porta One ministudio was released by IK Multimedia. [22]

  6. Quadraphonic open reel tape - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quadraphonic_open_reel_tape

    The TEAC A-2340 four-channel reel-to-reel tape unit from the 1970s was capable of playing Q4 tapes as well as making new four-channel recordings. These machines were one of the best ways to enjoy high quality, discrete four-channel sound at home.

  7. ‘The Michael Jackson Video Game Conspiracy’ by Huffington Post

    testkitchen.huffingtonpost.com/michaeljacksonsonic

    By 2003, Mallinson, then in his late teens, had been downloading and comparing Jackson and Sonic tracks for years. That September, he explained his Sonic/Jackson conspiracy theory in a post on Sonic Classic, one of the countless message board communities that dominated early-2000s Internet culture.

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