P. 1045), Xiii – Apple Final Cut Express HD User Manual

Page 1045

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Appendix A

Video Formats

1045

XIII

A Brief History of Film, Television, and Audio Formats

The timeline below helps to illustrate the constantly evolving list of media formats as
well as developmental peaks and valleys.

Year

Event

1826

First photograph is taken.

1877

Thomas Edison makes the first sound recording of “Mary had a little
lamb.”

1888

Heinrich Hertz shows that electricity can travel through space and
that radio waves are physically identical to light.

1889

35mm film is invented by splitting Eastman Kodak 70mm in half
(1.33 aspect ratio).

1895

Marconi develops radio transmitter and receiver.

1895

Lumière brothers demonstrate combination camera/projector (16 fps).

1918

First color motion picture appears.

1920

Commercial radio broadcasts begin.

1923

16mm film is introduced.

1927

First major motion picture with sound is released (1.37 aspect ratio),
ending the silent movie era.

1932

BBC begins official monochrome, 30-line video broadcast.

1934

RCA experiments with 343-line, 30 fps television format, removing
flicker by introducing interlacing.

1936

BBC begins broadcasting a high definition, monochrome, 405-line,
25 fps interlaced signal tied to European 50Hz electrical frequency.

1939

NBC begins regularly scheduled broadcasts of electronic television,
441 lines and 30 fps.

1941

National Television Systems Committee (NTSC) standardizes U.S.
commercial television format, 525 lines, 30 fps tied to U.S. 60Hz
electrical frequency.

1945

FCC allocates 13 channels for television broadcasting and moves
existing radio channels to 88–108MHz.

1946

ENIAC, the first electronic computer, using 18,000 vacuum tubes,
is unveiled.

1948

Long-playing (LP) phonograph records are introduced.

1948

Hollywood switches to nonflammable film.

1948

Ampex introduces its first professional audio tape recorder.

1948

The transistor is invented.

1951

The first commercially available computer, UNIVAC I, goes on sale.

1952

The FCC provides UHF channels 14 through 83.

1953

Second NTSC adopts RCA color-TV standard, 525 lines, 29.97 fps,
interlaced.

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