Kame-Sen'nin wrote:greg wrote:Wow! Talk about obscure. I have never seen these before. Maybe I have seen them, but my brain couldn't register what I was seeing, so I didn't pay attention.
The support for commercial releases seems to have been rather small, even in Japan. Still, it would be interesting to see if you start noticing these in any shops now!
greg wrote:So what do you view these on?
There were actually several models of Video8 VCRs, though I've never seen one in person.
Retro Thing has an interesting overview of a Video8 VCR and the format itself. I'm planning to pick up one of the VCRs on eBay to capture this tape (and any other future Video8 tapes I pick up), but I believe you can also play these with the use of a Video8 camcorder with A/V out.
For some reason, I seem to recall a model or two of VHS VCRs that could play Video8/Hi8/Super8 tapes in addition to standard VHS cassettes? Was that a thing or am I getting confused with something else entirely?
Neat find though! I'm curious, what formats have you found anime on for commercial release? While I doesn't surprise me that there were commercial beta releases, I've probably only seen ads for commercial beta and home recordings. I only learned about SVHS through fansubbing and that as the only time I saw anime on SVHS. I'd never thought to look for any on formats outside of the big ones (VHS, LD, Beta, etc.)
As a side note to DAT tapes being used for computer storage, my last couple years of university I got a bit of exposure to tape back up. The first company I worked with we had only a little bit of DAT machines; mostly newer (ie, 10 years old about) LTO tapes. When I interned at a bank there were a lot more DAT machines, about 50/50 DAT/LTO and it would not surprise me in the slightest if they were all still running. When I was studying for my undergrad, tape was still being pushed for disaster recovery and business continuity back-up solutions because while tapes themselves were very expensive, price-per-megabyte was cheaper than equivalent hard disk drive (at enterprise level) with the added benefits of less storage space required (to which is something we can all relate) and easier to archive.