As the DVD is a disc, rather than a long stream of video tape, you can jump around to any part of the disc. You can jump straight to the beginning, to the place you stopped watching last time you used the disc, or to any particular scene on the disc. The Mac's DVD player lets you add your own bookmarks to a movie so that you can jump back to the particular part of the disc that you have marked.
Video tape cassette, audio tape cassette, DAT tapes, etc.
VCR=Video Cassette Recorder and a PS3 has a blu-ray DVD drive therefore, no.
VHS cassette systems can be played on a player that has both DVD and VHS systems. The VHS player plays only VHS. The Player will not allow a DVD to be loaded into a VHS system. Summarizing, A DVD\VHS video player has two units which operate independent of each other.
DVD's are the digital equivalent of the old video tapes. DVD's are more robust than tape, don't wear out, and take up much less space in your collection than a video cassette would.
A DVD is better than a videotape because you never have to rewind.Have you seen the movie, Be Kind Don't Rewind.Rewind by William Sleator is a science fiction book.
Many options. 1. Hook up a DVD recorder to your camcorder or tape deck. Play the tape, and record the DVD. 2. Use video software to import your tape, and then record that file to a DVD, using iMovie or something similar. 3. Hire someone to do the video conversion for you. I find that most place charge about $40 for an hour of video.
It sounds like you have a defective machine. If under warranty, either take it back to the store if the manufacturer supports that procedure or return it to the manufacturer. If out of warranty buy one of a different brand.
AnswerFirst you press eject on the player. This opens the door which you have to put the cassette into. Then (and a safety WARNING is issued here), you insert the tape into the slot provided. Then you push the door closed and press play! A simple but genius invention which had touched many hearts, minds (and throats) along its history.AnswerIt worked the same way a CD player or DVD player works: you put it in and press play, fast forward, rewind, stop, pause, etc. Except, with a cassette player, "rewind" literally meant rewinding the actual tape inside the cassette. The music or video was encoded on one long plastic ribbon that wound around two spools (like spools of thread). When the tape played, it wound itself around the spool on the right, and as the winding tape passed over a certain place, the material on it would be played. When you rewound it, it would rewind itself back around the left spool.
Means it has a cassette in it if there is no cassette that means there must be somthing stuck inside that's making it think it has one . Mine started doing this and it turned out my daughter stuck a small toy inside it
To find The Lion King on video (meaning video cassette), one would have to look on eBay and other second-hand online stores, as video cassette tapes are no longer in production. The Lion King can also be bought on DVD and Blu-Ray, from eBay, Asda, Zavvi, and more. Currently the DVD is not in production and therefore copies are somewhat expensive compared to other animated movies of the same age.
These days, very little. Most teaching material should be available on DVD, and DVDs are less prone to problems like tape wear or tangling.
you can go to any electrical shop