440 points
by
@zdw
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March 7th, 2026 at 10:03pm
March 9th, 2026 at 4:04am
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?
March 9th, 2026 at 5:43am
Is there a version that doesn't require watching a video please? This would be 10x faster and easier as a text blob
March 8th, 2026 at 10:37pm
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
March 8th, 2026 at 10:24pm
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)
March 8th, 2026 at 11:40pm
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
March 9th, 2026 at 9:36am
Interesting to see how optical technology has evolved. In lighting design we also deal a lot with how light interacts with surfaces, lenses and reflectors.
Even small changes in optics can drastically change how light spreads or how uniform illumination appears in a space.
March 8th, 2026 at 10:07pm
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.
March 8th, 2026 at 11:02pm
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!
March 9th, 2026 at 9:40am
Now I wonder if something similar is possible with the magnetic fields on VHS tape
March 9th, 2026 at 7:33am
The title should have an asterisk.
March 9th, 2026 at 12:37am
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.
March 8th, 2026 at 10:31pm
But the opto mechanical parts of a laserdisc reader are way more interesting than a microscope.
March 9th, 2026 at 2:35am
Very cool but, I was hoping he was going to spin it and align with the camera’s refresh rate.
March 9th, 2026 at 1:01am
[dead]
March 9th, 2026 at 2:47am
That’s not a LaserDisc, it’s a CED video disk. Totally different technology.
@BobMcBob
March 8th, 2026 at 9:07pm
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.