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The Compact Cassette, also commonly called a cassette tape, [2] audio cassette, or simply tape or cassette, is an analog magnetic tape recording format for audio recording and playback. Invented by Lou Ottens and his team at the Dutch company Philips , the Compact Cassette was released in August 1963.
About 40% of the new stores that opened 2021 were dollar stores, according to Money.com. The three big dogs -- Dollar General, Dollar Tree and Family Dollar -- operate 33,000 locations across North...
Though Dollar Tree no longer sells all of its items for just $1, the discount store still offers remarkably good deals on items you might need in between a major shopping trip -- from food and...
Nearly 200 shuttered 99 Cents Only stores from Texas to California will be re-opened as Dollar Tree locations after the leases were secured out of bankruptcy proceedings. The transfer of ...
By 1976, ferricobalt formulations took over the video tape market, [60] and eventually they became the dominant high-performance tape for audio cassette. [51] Chromium dioxide disappeared from the Japanese domestic market, [51] although chrome remained the tape of choice for high fidelity cassette duplication among the music labels. In consumer ...
DC-International is a tape cassette format developed by Grundig [1] and marketed in 1965. DC is the abbreviation of "Double Cassette", as the cassette contained two reels; International was intended to indicate that, from the beginning, several companies around the world supported the format with suitable tape cassette tape recorders, recorded music cassettes and blank cassettes.
“Heading to Dollar Tree between the hours of 10 a.m.-2 p.m. is my ideal time, as the store has already been open for a little bit and has had time to move product to the shelves, but the rush ...
The SWTPC AC-30 Cassette Interface implements the Kansas City standard. In May 1976, it was sold for US$80 (equivalent to about $400 in 2023). The Kansas City standard ( KCS ), or Byte standard , is a data storage protocol for standard cassette tapes or other audio recording media at 300 bits per second .