The videotape format war was a period of an intense format war of rival incompatible models of video cassette recorders in the 1970s and early 1980s. It has gone in marketing history as the classic example of this kind of market competition.
Home video cassette recorders became available in the early 1970s, though the first system to be successful was Sony's Betamax. This was quickly followed by VHS (Video Home System) from JVC, and later by Video 2000 from Philips.
Betamax offered a slightly higher horizontal resolution (250 vs 240 lines for PAL), lower video noise, and less luma-chroma crosstalk than VHS, and was marketed as providing superior pictures to VHS. In practice however VHS picture quality was very similar to that from Beta, as the actual picture performance depended on other factors including the condition or quality of the tape, and individual video recorder models.
Within Europe there were three choices by 1980, with the arrival of the Video 2000 format from Philips and Grundig. Although featuring technology that was ahead of its time, V2000 took longer to develop and arrived late on the scene. Players were found to be less reliable than their VHS and Beta counterparts, and the format never gained substantial market share. V2000 was cancelled in 1985, the first casualty of the format war.
By the time Betamax machines became easier to rent, VHS had already claimed 70% of the market. At the same time tape rentals were beginning to become popular, and for a while it seemed that every little shop on the street-corner had a rack of tapes. As with many new technologies pornography was a great attraction of home video, since one could watch in private; In Britain the famous "video nasties" - films which were deemed too violent or gruesome for general release - were also highly sought, since they couldn't be seen anywhere else.
Yet again Sony missed the boat, being reluctant to sign licensing agreements with studios to have films made available in Betamax. Betamax's combination of lower market share and a lack of software both strengthened VHS's hand, and gradually the public turned away from Beta. In 1983 the top selling video recorder in the UK was the Sanyo Beta VTC5000. 1984 was Beta's best year with a 25% market share, but by 1986 it was down to 7.5% and the writing was on the wall.
In 1988 Sony began to market their own VHS machines, and despite claims that they were still backing Beta, it was clear that the format was dead -- at least in Europe and the U.S.. In parts of South America Beta continued to be popular, and in Japan the format was developed into ED-Beta and SuperBeta, and was still produced up to the end of 2002. The rise of DVD finally took away the Japanese niche market that Betamax had survived in during the 90s, giving the home format a total lifespan of 27 years.
Today, the only remaining aspect of the Betamax system is the slang term 'Betamaxed', which, predictably, indicates something that had a brief shelf life and was quickly replaced by the competition.
Despite the failure of Betamax, its technological successor, the Betacam tape, would become an industry standard for video recording, production and presentation. Despite the many improvements in VHS for home use, Beta technology remained at a higher quality and continues to be used to this day, only now beginning to be supplanted by direct hard drive storage of video.
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