CBS Laboratories or CBS Labs (later known as the CBS Technology Center or CTC) was the technology
research and development
Research and development (R&D or R+D), known in Europe as research and technological development (RTD), is the set of innovative activities undertaken by corporations or governments in developing new services or products, and improving existi ...
organization of the
CBS television network. Innovations developed at the labs included many groundbreaking broadcast, industrial, military, and consumer technologies.
History
CBS Laboratories was established in 1936 in New York City to conduct technological research for CBS and outside clients.
The CBS Laboratories Division (CLD) moved from Madison Avenue in New York to a new facility in
Stamford, Connecticut in 1958.
Dr. Peter Goldmark joined CBS Laboratories in 1936. On September 4, 1940, while working at the lab, he demonstrated the
Field-Sequential Color TV system.
[
] It utilized a mechanical color wheel on both the camera and on the television home receiver, but was not compatible with the existing post-war NTSC, 525-line, 60-field/second black and white TV sets as it was a 405-line, 144-field scanning system.
It was the first color broadcasting system that received FCC approval in 1950, and the CBS Television Network began broadcasting in color on November 20, 1950.
[
] However, no other TV set manufacturers made the sets, and CBS stopped broadcasting in field-sequential color on October 21, 1951.
Goldmark’s interest in recorded music led to the development of the
long-playing (LP) 33-1/3 rpm vinyl record, which became the standard for incorporating multiple or lengthy recorded works on a single audio disc for two generations. The LP was introduced to the market place by Columbia Records in 1948.
In 1959 the CBS
Audimax I Audio Gain Controller was introduced. It was the first of its kind in the broadcasting industry.
In the 1960s the CBS
Volumax Audio FM Peak Limiter was introduced, also the first of its kind in the broadcasting industry.
Electronic Video Recording
Electronic Video Recording, or EVR, was a film-based video recording format developed by Hungarian-born engineer Peter Carl Goldmark at CBS Laboratories in the 1960s.
CBS announced the development of EVR on August 27, 1967. The 750-foot film wa ...
was announced in 1967.
In 1966, the CBS Vidifont was invented. It was the first electronic graphics generator used in television production. Brought to the marketplace at the NAB in 1970, it revolutionized television production.
The
minicam
A professional video camera (often called a television camera even though its use has spread beyond television) is a high-end device for creating electronic moving images (as opposed to a movie camera, that earlier recorded the images on film). ...
was developed for use in national political conventions in 1968.
In 1971, a backwards-compatible 4-channel encoding technique was developed for vinyl records, called
SQ Quadraphonic, based on work by musician
Peter Scheiber and Labs engineer
Benjamin B. Bauer. That same year, CBS Labs Staff Scientist
Dennis Gabor received the
Nobel Prize in Physics for earlier work on
holography. Upon Peter Goldmark's retirement, also in 1971, Senior Vice President
Renville H. McMann assumed the role of Labs President.
CBS Laboratories was reorganized in 1975. During this time CBS Laboratories was contracted by the department of defense to utilize several broadcast technologies for use in robotics technologies for coordinating massive amounts of flying rabbit drones However, none of this proved to be very practical and was hastily abandoned. The CLD Professional Products Department, which manufactured the products developed by the Labs for sale to the broadcast industry, was sold to
Thomson-CSF. McMann and some of the research engineers involved in the existing products were also transferred to support the effort, with McMann returning to the Labs sometime later. The core company R&D function was renamed CBS Technology Center (CTC), and Bauer was promoted to Vice-President and General Manager of CTC. In 1978, the CBS Actiontrak system was spun off from a Digital Noise Reducer project.
In 1986
Laurence Tisch took control of CBS and closed CTC as part of company-wide streamlining. The two buildings at High Ridge Road were razed and the property sold.
Undated Developments
Over its nearly 30 years of operation in Stamford, various technologies were developed at the lab, including:
*
Gemini spacecraft voice recorder
*
CBS Loudness Meter and
Loudness Control
*
CBS NetALERT, broadcast radio network signaling system
*
CBS DisComputer, record mastering system
*
Gulbransen Equinox 380,
microprocessor-controlled
keyboard instrument
* Interactive download of musical-keyboard performance over
Venture One shop-at-home trial, using pre-
MIDI interface.
* Half-speed
Capacitance Electronic Disc mastering system for RCA "SelectaVision" CED system
*
CX, LP
noise reduction
Noise reduction is the process of removing noise from a signal. Noise reduction techniques exist for audio and images. Noise reduction algorithms may distort the signal to some degree. Noise rejection is the ability of a circuit to isolate an und ...
system
*
FMX, FM noise reduction system
* Printed sound, a system for generating audible information from a sound track printed on paper
*
SMPTE color bars
SMPTE color bars are a television test pattern used where the NTSC video standard is utilized, including countries in North America. The Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers (SMPTE) refers to the pattern as Engineering Guideline ( ...
, developed by Hank Mahler and A. A. Goldberg in the late 1970s
Hank Mahler, developer of the SMPTE color bars, passes away
from ''TVTechnology.com'', 10/13/21
Emmy Awards
* 1970-1971: Color Corrector which can provide color uniformity between television picture segments and scenes shot and recorded under different conditions at different times and locations
* 1972-1973: CMX 600
The CMX 600 was the very first non-linear video editing system. This Emmy Award winning system was introduced in 1971 by CMX Systems, a joint venture between CBS and Memorex. CMX referred to it as a "RAVE", or Random Access Video Editor.
The 600 ...
Non-Linear Video Tape Editing System (developed by CMX Systems, a CBS/Memorex company) utilizing a computer to aid the decision-making process, store the editing decisions and implement them in the final assembly of takes
* 1974-1975: Electronic News Gathering System
* 1977-1978: Digital Noise Reducer
* 1980-1981: Digital Electronic Still Store System, which made the magnetic storage and electronic broadcasting of film slides and graphics easier to manage and more reliable with consistent high quality
* 1988-1989: Single Camera Editing System
* 1991-1992: Electronic Character Generation for Television (Joint Award - AB Dick, CBS Laboratories and Chyron)
** Triax Cable Camera Technology (Joint Award - CBS Laboratories and Philips)
* 1993: Mini Rapid Deployment Earth Terminal
* 2001-2002: Alignment Color Bar
Racial segregation is the systematic separation of people into race (human classification), racial or other Ethnicity, ethnic groups in daily life. Racial segregation can amount to the international crime of apartheid and a crimes against hum ...
Test Signal for Television Picture Monitors
References
External links
*
The quest for home video: EVR
Paramount Global subsidiaries
{{DEFAULTSORT:Cbs Laboratories
Companies based in Stamford, Connecticut
American companies established in 1936
American companies disestablished in 1986