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TIME: Almanac 1990
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1990 Time Magazine Compact Almanac, The (1991)(Time).iso
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time
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061989
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06198900.059
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1990-09-22
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VIDEO, Page 62Tape for TwoThe dual-deck VCR arrives
In 58 million homes, the VCR has become nearly as much a part
of American life as the family car. But despite the VCR's
advantages, video buffs complain about its limits. To duplicate
prerecorded movies, for instance, requires two VCRs awkwardly
cabled together. No wonder, then, that fans at Chicago's Consumer
Electronics Show last week were excited by a new machine that
eliminates the drawback. Moreover, its appearance was a triumph
over well-wired opposition in Tokyo and Hollywood.
The center of the excitement was the first dual-deck videotape
recorder available to U.S consumers, the VCR-2, made by the tiny
Arizona-based Go-Video company. The VCR-2 enables its users to make
high-quality duplicates of prerecorded tapes easily. It also lets
viewers watch a tape while simultaneously recording off the air.
Go-Video hopes to have a limited supply of the VCR-2 in stores by
Christmastime, priced at just under $1,000.
But the machine's move from freeze-frame to fast-forward has
not been easy. For starters, Go-Video could find no Japanese
companies, which control manufacture of crucial VCR parts, willing
to provide needed components. For another thing, U.S. movie studios
opposed the machine. So the company sued 15 Japanese and Korean
makers, plus the Hollywood studios, claiming restraint of trade.
Several manufacturers have now settled with Go-Video, and Korea's
Samsung is tooling up to produce the VCR-2. Meanwhile, Hollywood
has modified its opposition because Go-Video agreed to install
circuitry that will prevent the VCR-2 from copying movies protected
by antitheft coding. Still, moviemakers may see double for a while.
Many of the films on store shelves, including hot new rentals like
Coming to America and Crocodile Dundee II, do not contain the
coding.