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Pioneer is ceasing production of their three remaining LaserDisc players, marking the end of major manufacture for players of the giant, shiny, long-obsolete format. Pioneer had continued to build ...
Pioneer announced this week that it was halting the production of its line of Laserdisc players. If you are shocked that the electronics giant was still making Laserdisc players, you are not alone.
But the game had problems from the get-go -- chief among them was the unreliable home-use Pioneer PR-7820 laserdisc player and later, the LD-V1000. Fast-forward 30 years and this is where the ...
Despite LaserDisc players being hard to come by, the format is experiencing a bit of resurgence. Collectors are trying to track down some of the rarer LaserDiscs, and you might even have some.
Well, Pioneer has done nothing to discourage this thought by announcing that it is to cease production of Laserdisc players. Yes, that's right those LP-shaped movie carriers that we all thought ...
I never thought I would write another post on LDs after the one in January this year in which I reported about Pioneer stopping the production of LDs players forever. But yesterday the same ...
P>Otherwise, this model was one of the higher end players. It has dual AV outputs and an S-Video output (S-Video is kinda useless on a laserdisc player, but its a "high end feature"). It has dual ...
and checks the LaserDisc hit spots with the shots fired by the player, and if the coordinates correspond, it instructs the LaserDisc player to display an explosion sequence. For sections where the ...