When the videocassette recorder was launched on the consumer market in the mid-1970s, it transformed home entertainment. Bringing together complementary but also competing interests from the consumer electronics industry and the film, television and other copyright industries, video created a new se
Video and DVD Industries
β Scribed by Paul McDonald
- Publisher
- BFI
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 255
- Series
- International Screen Industries
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
When the videocassette recorder was launched on the consumer market in the mid-1970s, it transformed home entertainment. Bringing together complementary but also competing interests from the consumer electronics industry and the film, television and other copyright industries, video created a new sector of media business. Two decades later, DVD reinvented video media for the digital age. DVD provided consumers with an innovative form of entertainment technology and almost instantaneously became the catalyst for a huge boom in the video market. Although the VCR and DVD created major markets for video hardware and software, the video business has been continually shaped by industry conflicts and tensions. Repeatedly the video market has become divided when faced with the introduction of competing formats. Easy reproduction of films and other works on cassette or disc made video software a lucrative market for the copyright industries but also intensified struggles to combat the effects of commercial piracy. 'Video and DVD Industries' examines the business of video entertainment and provides the first study looking at DVD from an industrial perspective. Detailing divisions in the video business, the book outlines industry battles over incompatible formats, from the Betamax/VHS war, to competing laserdisc systems, alternatives such as video compact disc or Digital Video Express, and the introduction of HDDVD and Blu-ray high-definition systems. Chapters also look at the formation of international markets in the globalization of video media, the contradictory responses of the Hollywood studios to video and DVD, and the legal and technological measures taken to control industrialized video piracy.
β¦ Table of Contents
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction: The Video Business
Bringing Entertainment Home: The Consumer Electronics Industry and the VCR
Disc to Digital: From Videodisc to DVD
Porous Media: Global Diffusion of Video and DVD
Hollywood Home Entertainment: Controlling and Profiting from Video Software
Videocopia: Shaping the US Market in the Digital Age
Illicit Business: The Global Economy of Industrialised Video Piracy
Conclusion: Video Futures
Bibliography
Index
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