A brief timeline of cameras and camcorders
The word resulted from the fusion of the camera recorders Cam (era-re) corders to become camcorders. Camcorders, evidently, benefitted from the camera at least for the front end. Development of digital and information technologies were certainly beneficial. American inventor Jerome H. Lemelson, applied for patent for a handheld camcorder in 1977, and it was rejected on the grounds that is not possible to make one as he suggested. The rejection only spurred him to intensify his efforts to prove himself right and the patent office wrong.
With the miniaturization of hardware, the equipment became more portable. BMC 100 was the Beta Movie video camera incorporating the Beta system deck enabling the provision of a camera and a recorder in a single unit. The elimination of the long cables connecting the camera and the recorder drastically reduced inconveniences and improved the freedom of the cameraman dramatically.
It became the standard equipment for news broadcasters and studio video editing. However, it had a major drawback of being too expensive for common man. A keen competition developed between Sony and JVC each vying to outdo the other, introducing models with innovative features. Consumer interest continued to fuel developments. In 1983, Sony introduced their first consumer camcorder named Betamovie BMC 100P. The design did not permit single hand grip and the camcorder had to be carried on the shoulder of the operator. JVC was not too far behind. They introduced their version the first VHS C camcorder.
Sony then introduced its compact Video8 format in 1985. By this time competition had intensified and other companies too jumped into the fray. The same year Panasonic, RCA and Hitachi came with their models using the full-size VHS cassette with three-hour recording. 1987 saw the introduction of the full-size SuperVHS, the SVHS camcorder. This provided the much-needed inexpensive camcorder for the benefit of news gatherers and other videographers. Sony quickly upgraded their Video8 and released it as Hi8 to compete with S-VHS. The shoulder mounted models are still in use and speaks volumes about their utility for the professionals.
Digitization continued its expansion and in 1985 Sony, JVC Panasonic and others launched DV the standard camcorder for home video and independent filmmaking.