Video Toaster


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Video Toaster

An earlier video production and editing system for Windows from NewTek, Inc., San Antonio, TX (www.newtek.com). Video Toaster (VT) was introduced in 1990 for Commodore's Amiga computer. Revolutionary at the time for the desktop video market, VT included hardware and software that provided digital effects, character generation and 3D animation. It also controlled professional analog tape decks, and its $5,000 price tag made it the most affordable broadcast-quality video system on the market.

After Commodore went out of business in the mid-1990s, a Windows version of VT was released in 1999 that supported uncompressed D1 digital video. In 2003, a greatly enhanced VT[3] version was introduced that continued the tradition of providing a professional video production environment at a fraction of the cost of mainstream editing systems. The last version (VT[5]) came out in 2007 but was discontinued in 2010. It was also used in NewTek's TriCaster portable production system until 2012. See video/TV history.


On the Amiga
NewTek chose the Amiga for its advanced graphics in the early 1990s. The monitor on the right displayed the videotape, and VT software provided the controls. Analog signals from tape were converted to digital, edited in the computer and converted back to analog to a second tape deck. (Image courtesy of NewTek, Inc.)







On Windows
This is an earlier Windows-based VT system. For under $10,000, Varto Technologies combined VT with several CPU options and a specialized keyboard. This was equivalent to high-end editing systems costing 10 times as much. (Image courtesy of Varto Technologies, www.vartotechnologies.com)
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References in periodicals archive ?
Video Toaster now performs real-time video manipulation for roughly $4,000.
In its second version, Video Toaster System 2.0 also offers real-time warping of live video, cube-mapping, soft-edge transitions and organic effects such as clouds, pouring liquid, fire, tearing paper and breaking glass.