Microscopes can see video on a laserdisc

(youtube.com)

372 points | by zdw a day ago ago

36 comments

  • BobMcBob 10 hours ago ago

    Tech Tangents is one of the best retro channels on youtube but by retro I dont mean glorified nostalgia either. Shelby puts a lot of work into his videos and likes to showcase what awesome engineering went into some of the early tech that was practically magic. Love the channel and glad to see it on HN.

  • onnimonni 3 hours ago ago

    I'm not that familiar with CED but the fact that we can see the images with microscopes is because these are analog discs? And that was because computing power back then was non-existent so they didn't use any kind of compression?

    • throwaway27448 an hour ago ago

      This is a distinction without meaning: all digital anything is analogue if you look closely enough

      > And that was because computing power back then was non-existent so they didn't use any kind of compression?

      Compression is not a medium-level detail. You can easily store compressed data on a laserdisc.

      • system2 an hour ago ago

        No, with digital, you need encoding. How can you even compare binary with embedded images.

        • throwaway27448 an hour ago ago

          > How can you even compare binary with embedded images.

          How are the images encoded?

  • throwaway27448 an hour ago ago

    Is there a version that doesn't require watching a video please? This would be 10x faster and easier as a text blob

    • nilslice 36 minutes ago ago

      yes, you must save it to a laserdisc, and then observe it though a highly magnified digital microscope looking for a specific frame.

  • rustyhancock 8 hours ago ago

    Here's a screen capture of the end credits visible on the disc the videos worth it but I do think sometimes you need to start with the money shot https://ibb.co/v4KK88fF

    • crazydoggers 8 hours ago ago

      This is from a CED not a laserdisc.

      • iamtedd 2 hours ago ago

        If you watch the video, he looked at both.

        • crazydoggers an hour ago ago

          Yes, but the end credits mentioned by the parent and the link to the image is the CED. That and the title of this post make it seem like this level of image clarity is from a LaserDisc which its not. I think it's worth being clear.

  • VorpalWay 9 hours ago ago

    The live stream of this had more interesting things as well, such as looking at the ink on mimeographs compared to inkjet printing. Long and rambly as live streams tend to be, but it is there if anyone cares.

    https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=zIsCswtkozI (mimeograph around 3:36:00 mark)

  • csours 7 hours ago ago

    Not nearly as cool, but I was able to show a colleague the letters in a raster image section of a pdf using xxd by varying the output width

    • EvanAnderson 6 hours ago ago

      I wrote a simple tool, when I was a kid, that dumped binaries into VGA mode 0x13 and allowed me to vary the width. Mode 0x13 is one byte per pixel so it was just a simple REP MOVSB to put data into the buffer (no worrying about bitplanes). It was so useful in reverse engineering software. Besides raster data, regular data structures often jump out.

      • Retr0id 6 hours ago ago

        Fun fact, if you load a file with extension ".data" into GIMP there's a UI where you can set the pixel format and adjust the width/height with sliders

        • userbinator 3 hours ago ago

          Photoshop does the same with the .raw extension.

      • CamelCaseCondo an hour ago ago

        I did the same thing to evaluate random number generators by drawing pixels with the count value. You see a pattern, line or clusters? Bad generator.

  • smusamashah 9 hours ago ago

    So CAV (constant angular velocity) is an encoding format for laser disks. When something is written with CAV, it is basically analogue data and therefore repeating patterns can be recognized on the disk.

    • wtallis 8 hours ago ago

      No, CAV has nothing to do with encoding, and both analog and digital formats have used both CAV and CLV and hybrids of the two.

      The legible text seen in the microscope images happens because of the combination of LaserDisc recording a raw and uncompressed encoding of the analog video signal, the way that LaserDisc used CAV to store an integer number of frames per track so that the image data for corresponding on-screen locations of subsequent frames would be aligned at the same radial position on the disc, and the credits scrolling vertically at constant speed.

      If LaserDisc had used a digital encoding (especially a compressed encoding), the data on disc may still have had discernible patterns but the text would not necessarily have been legible. If it had used CAV but not stored a whole number of frames per track, then temporal and spatial locality on screen would not have corresponded so well to spatial locality on disc. And the vertically-scrolling credits are pretty much the only kind of content that can produce the recognizable and legible images on the disc surface.

      I think the fact that the aspect ratio of the text came out approximately right probably is a consequence of the scrolling speed of the credits being chosen to suit the vertical resolution of the video. If the text had appeared squished in the microscope, it would probably have been moving too fast on screen to be clearly legible.

      • xattt 8 hours ago ago

        Is the image seen via microscope basically a readout of the image on a spectroscope?

        Those can have near-legible images, but most of the time they are not.

    • VerifiedReports 4 hours ago ago

      No; it's strictly a reference to constant RPM or variable RPM.

      CAV discs contained one frame per rotation. While this meant you could only fit half an hour on one side of a disc, it did give you perfect slow-motion and freeze-frames.

      I worked in a video store and loved LaserDiscs. The Duran Duran video album was CAV, and the Pioneer LD-700 had such a fast transport mechanism and remote control that I could to DJ-style "scratching" with it.

    • jmkd 9 hours ago ago

      Not simply repeating patterns, readable text from the credits as shown in the video.

    • Zafira 7 hours ago ago

      Sorta?

      The data being written to the disk is the same in CAV or CLV disks, but the player just needs to know how to spin the disk at the right speed so that the laser can read the pits/lands correctly. It is purely a detail about the speed that the disk is spun at so they can cram more data on it with CLV disks.

      What CAV LaserDiscs allow for, though, is to make it extremely obvious where scanlines and blanking intervals are in the video signal.

  • ralferoo 8 hours ago ago

    Actually amazing being able to read the text like that, and on two different types of discs. Great video, was much better than I was expecting it to be from the title!

  • amelius 8 hours ago ago

    But the opto mechanical parts of a laserdisc reader are way more interesting than a microscope.

  • oofbey 6 hours ago ago

    Fun fact about laser discs. They are analogue not digital. CD’s store digital information with the presence or absence of pits. Fairly ancient but still fundamentally feels like a very old version of a thumb drive.

    Laser discs are not digital. They encode the analogue video signal’s value as the length of the pit. It is digitized in the time domain - sampled at some frequency, but the “vertical” signal value is stored entirely analogue. In terms of encoding it’s more similar to a VHS tape than a CD. Kinda crazy.

    • qsera 40 minutes ago ago

      So how does writes work? Does an analog signal translate into pit-lengths with absolute precision?

    • throwaway290 27 minutes ago ago

      Everything is analog when it gets to real world

    • a-dub 6 hours ago ago

      yeah i remember learning this as a kid and being surprised. i originally thought laserdiscs were modern high tech, but then they turned out to actually be from the late 70s/early 80s with the primitive analog video encoding where red book audio cds of the mid to late 80s were actually digital.

      • VerifiedReports 4 hours ago ago

        BUT... Pioneer put AC-3 (Dolby Digital) surround on LaserDiscs before DVDs came out. So LaserDiscs were the first video medium to offer digital sound at home.

        And at that point, most players sold were combo players that could also play CDs.

        And there was one more disc format: CD Video. It was a CD-sized digital single that also had a LaserDisc section for the (analog) music video. I have a couple; one is Bon Jovi.

      • mh- 6 hours ago ago

        I just learned this in my 40s and am surprised. Very cool.

  • SV_BubbleTime 4 hours ago ago

    Very cool but, I was hoping he was going to spin it and align with the camera’s refresh rate.

    • system2 an hour ago ago

      That would be cool with a variable motor and a 3d printed mount maybe.

  • macshome 4 hours ago ago

    That’s not a LaserDisc, it’s a CED video disk. Totally different technology.

    • ZeWaka 4 hours ago ago

      A LaserDisc was featured in the video alongside the CED video disk.