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Capacitance Electronic Disc videodisc players and the discs themselves.
To help control the consumer price of this unit, it was first designed around the RCA Capacitance Electronic Disc player.
Caddies date at least to the Capacitance Electronic Disc, which used a caddy from 1976 to protect the grooves of the disc.
The Capacitance Electronic Disc (also known as a CED) was a type of video disc.
This system was capacitance-based, like capacitance electronic disc (CED), but the discs were grooveless with the stylus being guided by servo signals in the disc surface.
This original version was released on Capacitance Electronic Disc in 1984 and on VHS and LaserDisc several times during the 1980s and 1990s.
The film was first aired on cable television and subsequently sold on VHS, Capacitance Electronic Disc, and Laserdisc formats by Vestron Video.
(i) "Selecta Vision" (CED: Capacitance Electronic Disc) This uses a shallow groove to direct the stylus and is called the "grooved" capacitance disc.
SCM was initially devised as a quality control tool for the RCA/CED (Capacitance Electronic Disc), a video disk technology that was a predecessor of the DVD.
Manufacturers also introduced other systems such as needle-based, record-style discs (RCA's Capacitance Electronic Disc, JVC's Video High Density disc) and Philips' LaserDisc.
It was originally released on VHS, Capacitance Electronic Disc, and laserdisc, and was released as a (bootleg) DVD in Brazil (as seen in the cover on the right) in 2003.
This collection was originally released with stereophonic sound on LaserDisc (the original optical disc format) and Capacitance Electronic Disc formats, as well as in the Beta-HiFi and VHS-HiFi videotape formats.
The film was released on VHS, Betamax, and LaserDisc in the early 1980s and was also the very first release on RCA's defunct Capacitance Electronic Disc, also known as SelectaVision VideoDisc.
The Capacitance Electronic Disc (CED) was an analog video disc playback system developed by RCA, in which video and audio could be played back on a TV set using a special needle and high-density groove system similar to phonograph records.