| 
	
 | 
 Posted by Bill Vermillion on 10/19/05 15:15 
In article <Jxa5f.3481$h25.992@news-wrt-01.rdc-nyc.rr.com>, 
AnthonyR <nomail@nospam.com> wrote: 
> 
>"Smarty" <nobody@nobody.com> wrote in message  
>news:UvqdndWdIvbsusjeRVn-oA@adelphia.com... 
>> Ken, 
>> 
>> That is exactly what I do Ken. I actually offered that option in a  
>> subsequent reply, describing how I took DVDs like Goodfellow (Robert  
>> DiNiro) and others which span 2 sides and reauthor them to 2 disks. 
>> 
>> I'm old enough to remember the Garrard turntable which had a robotic arm  
>> which would flip vinyl LP albums years ago. What a monstrosity. I'm glad  
>> this is NOT being done for DVDs. 
>> 
>> Smarty 
>> 
>> 
>well yes because LP's had that physical connection with the needle to make  
>but we've come a long way with electronics 
>since those days, a laser on either side and a switching circuit would be  
>all that is needed now but it would add to cost of manufacturing. 
 
>They even had lasers that can detect the physical grooves in old LP albums  
>nowaday and convert the optical data into digital info that is then  
>converted to music, so it can play old records without a needle or contact,  
>and correct for scratches and avoid hiss etc.. 
>But these new record players are about $10,000 I believe. 
>Amazing what lasers can do. Right? 
 
The prices I've seen for those units are 2 to 3 times that. 
 
And they won't play everything.  It must be a vinyl disk with the 
black dye in the vinyl as transparent vinyl disks or picture disks 
aren't readabable. 
 
Bill 
 
--  
Bill Vermillion - bv @ wjv . com
 
[Back to original message] 
 |