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- VIDEO, Page 62Tape for Two
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- The dual-deck VCR arrives
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- In 58 million homes, the VCR has become nearly as much a
- part of American life as the family car. But despite the VCR's
- advantages, video buffs complain about its limits. To duplicate
- prerecorded movies, for instance, requires two VCRs awkwardly
- cabled together. No wonder, then, that fans at Chicago's
- Consumer Electronics Show last week were excited by a new
- machine that eliminates the drawback. Moreover, its appearance
- was a triumph over well-wired opposition in Tokyo and Hollywood.
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- The center of the excitement was the first dual-deck
- videotape recorder available to U.S consumers, the VCR-2, made
- by the tiny Arizona-based Go-Video company. The VCR-2 enables
- its users to make high-quality duplicates of prerecorded tapes
- easily. It also lets viewers watch a tape while simultaneously
- recording off the air. Go-Video hopes to have a limited supply
- of the VCR-2 in stores by Christmastime, priced at just under
- $1,000.
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- But the machine's move from freeze-frame to fast-forward
- has not been easy. For starters, Go-Video could find no
- Japanese companies, which control manufacture of crucial VCR
- parts, willing to provide needed components. For another thing,
- U.S. movie studios opposed the machine. So the company sued 15
- Japanese and Korean makers, plus the Hollywood studios, claiming
- restraint of trade. Several manufacturers have now settled with
- Go-Video, and Korea's Samsung is tooling up to produce the
- VCR-2. Meanwhile, Hollywood has modified its opposition because
- Go-Video agreed to install circuitry that will prevent the VCR-2
- from copying movies protected by antitheft coding. Still,
- moviemakers may see double for a while. Many of the films on
- store shelves, including hot new rentals like Coming to America
- and Crocodile Dundee II, do not contain the coding.
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