Yo mother.
Tape recording. Magnetic tape was used extensively before CD's were invented.
The device used to play tape cassettes is called a cassette player or cassette deck. It reads magnetic tape contained within the cassette and converts the stored audio signals into sound. Some cassette players may also have recording capabilities, allowing users to create their own tapes.
That is the correct spelling of "tape recording" (on magnetic tape, or otherwise).
The audio tape was developed by German engineer Fritz Pfleumer in 1928, who invented the magnetic tape for sound recording. His innovation laid the foundation for later advancements in audio recording technology, leading to the creation of the tape recorder. The first practical tape recorder was later developed in the 1930s by the German company AEG.
Recording a Tape the Colour of the Light was created on 2005-08-22.
no
Cassettes ARE magnetic recording tape. You can record these onto a computer and then burn them to CD, or use a standalone CD recorder to transfer the recording.
sicky tape was invented in the 1930's.
Richard drew invented Scotch Tape. And Masking tape and Duct tape. he invented scotch, Masking, and duct tape! he invented scotch, Masking, and duct tape!
The person who invented the tape is, Richard Drew in 1930.
Magnetic tape for computers was introduced in 1951 on the UNIVAC i, but was probably "invented" in 1948 or 1949 while Eckert and Mauchly were trying to think of ways to get data into and out of a computer at "electronic speeds" to avoid the bottleneck of then existing electromechanical equipment. Magnetic tape for audio goes back to the 1930's, although practical civilian applications had to wait for the end of WWII. (The Germans used magnetic tape during the war, while the Allies had only wire recorders.)
An outdated form of storage. It had a magnetic tape inside where the recording was recorded.