The Digital Compact Cassette, or DCC, was one such format. Released by Philips in 1992 as a replacement for the analog audio cassette, it failed to gain traction in the market and disappeared ...
For this week’s Hack Chat, we’re talking about reverse engineering the Digital Compact Cassette. Why should we care about an obsolete format that was only on the market for four years?
Very few people know the true story about DCC, the Digital Compact Cassette. Was DCC's audio compression the grandfather of all compressed audio formats today? Why did DCC have such a short life?
Debuting as the Philips Compact Cassette in 1963 ... As an addendum to the lack of noise reduction, cassettes that include Dolby Digital encoding are usually marked on the cassette -- and none ...
A documentary about the past present and potential future of the Digital Compact Cassette Very few people know the true story about the Digital Compact Cassette or DCC Was DCCs audio compression ...
Introduced by Philips in 1965, the "Compact Cassette" offered ... many of the first personal computers allowed audio cassette recorders to function as digital storage. Never widely used, their ...
Early Sony Walkman models primarily played pre-recorded compact cassettes, but later versions supported CDs ... It offered a number of “firsts,” like a digital readout and a shock-resident mechanism.
This compact and powerful streaming amplifier from Marantz offers high-quality audio and pairs with a wide range of speakers.
The audio cassette format launched in the 1960s is experiencing a revival in 2024 and I have become something of a tape ...
Popular formats for portable recorded music in the 1970s-1990s were compact cassettes and 8 ... recording messages on cassette tapes. Digital answering machines later replaced the tape-based ...
Since those days, the 10-inch has been superceded by multiple different formats – over the years, 7 inch, 12-inch, cassingles, 8-track, Digital Compact Cassette, MiniDisc, Compact Disc ...