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  2. Blackmagic Design - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackmagic_Design

    Blackmagic Design Pty Ltd is an Australian digital cinema company and manufacturer based in South Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. It designs and produces broadcast and cinema-grade hardware; notably, high-end digital movie cameras , and also develops video editing software , such as the DaVinci Resolve and Blackmagic Fusion applications.

  3. Cinema Camera (2012) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cinema_Camera_(2012)

    The Blackmagic Cinema Camera (often simply the Cinema Camera or BMCC) is a digital movie camera developed and manufactured by Blackmagic Design and released on September 4, 2012. It is part of the Cinema Camera family of digital movie cameras and shoots 2.5K video in raw , Apple ProRes , CinemaDNG and Avid DNxHD formats.

  4. DVD recorder - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DVD_recorder

    A DVD recorder is an optical disc recorder that uses optical disc recording technologies to digitally record analog or digital signals onto blank writable DVD media. Such devices are available as either installable drives for computers or as standalone components for use in television studios or home theater systems .

  5. DaVinci Resolve - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DaVinci_Resolve

    At NAB 2010 in Las Vegas, in April 2010, Blackmagic Design announced three new pricing models for Resolve, with a new software-only macOS version retailing for $995, the macOS version with the Advanced Control Surface (previously branded as Impresario by da Vinci Systems [14] [15]) retailing for $29,995, and licenses for the Linux version (supporting multiple-GPUs for increased performance ...

  6. Video Cassette Recording - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Video_Cassette_Recording

    Philips N1702. A VCR-LP recorder. The rare Grundig SVR4004 machine. VCR later evolved into a related format known as VCR-LP. This exploited slant azimuth to greatly increase the recording time. Although both formats used identical VCR cassettes, the recordings were incompatible between the two systems, and few if any dual-format recorders existed.

  7. Blackmagic Fusion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackmagic_Fusion

    This type of compositing interface allows great flexibility, including the ability to modify the parameters of an earlier image processing step "in context" (while viewing the final composite). Upon its acquisition by Blackmagic Design, Fusion was released in two versions: the freeware Fusion, and the commercially sold Fusion Studio.

  8. Reel-to-reel audio tape recording - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reel-to-reel_audio_tape...

    The result was the 3M Digital Audio Mastering System, which consisted of a 32-track deck (16-bit, 50 kHz audio) running 1-inch tape and a 4-track, 1/2-inch mastering recorder. 3M's 32-track recorder was priced at $115,000 in 1978 (equivalent to $537,000 in 2023).

  9. Ultra Stereo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ultra_Stereo

    Ultra Stereo is a cinema sound system that was developed in 1984 [1] by chief engineer Jack Cashin.. It was a 4/2/4 photographic sound encoding and decoding procedure compatible with (and using the same technical basic structure, with identical sound quality as) its competitor Dolby Stereo Matrix.