with a computer you would use a tv tuner card or a usb tv tuner.
kinescope
yes, you can, just not television police shows. also, police have dashboard cameras so its definently ok
The Ring is about a girl named Samara Morgan who creates an evil videotape that if you watch it you will die seven days later because she comes out of your television.
The Ring is about a girl named Samara Morgan who creates an evil videotape that if you watch it you will die seven days later because she comes out of your television.
The first practical videotape was developed in the late 1950s, with the commercial introduction of the Ampex VR-1000 in 1956. This marked a significant advancement in television broadcasting, as it allowed for the recording and playback of video content. The technology rapidly evolved, leading to various formats and improvements throughout the following decades.
if your trying to capture a game on your computer use a freeware that videotape your desktop such as camsudio if your trying to capture from tv use a capture card
I will videotape the whole thing
Quadruplex videotape was created in 1956.
Videotape - band - was created in 2007.
In the sentence, 'My aunt will give me a videotape.', the direct object is 'videotape', the indirect object is 'me'. will give -> videotape (to me)
A videotape makes excellent evidence in the courtroom.
Before WW2 (1939 to 1942) there were too few TV stations and almost all programming (except for movies which were already on 35mm movie film) was live. Early television programs (1946 to 1956) were distributed to TV stations on 35mm movie film, which was scanned with a flying spot scanner to generate video. Bing Crosby Enterprises (BCE), gave the world's first demonstration of a primitive videotape recording in Los Angeles on November 11, 1951, but the quality was too poor to make it practical. The first practical professional broadcast quality videotape machines capable of replacing movie film were the two-inch videotape machines introduced by Ampex in Chicago on April 14, 1956.