| Digital Compact Cassette (DCC) was a short-lived audio format created by Philips in the early 1990s. Pitched as a competitor to Minidisc (MD), it
never caught on with the general public. It shared its form factor with
standard analogue cassettes, and players were designed to accept
either type of tape. The idea was to provide this backward
compatibility so users could adopt digital recording without having to make their tape collections obsolete. In practice it
has been shown that consumers are often ready to adopt new technology without such backward compatibility.
Unlike DAT, fixed heads are used, not a helical rotating drum type head. This makes the player much simpler and more
robust. However, fixed heads are not capable of achieving the same bandwidth as
rotary heads, and so for digital recording, a compression scheme
called PASC was used, which is a 4:1 scheme
similar to MPEG-1. Many believed this gave better quality audio than ATRAC (used in the original MD), but not as good as DAT.
DCC was discontinued in 1996 after Philips admitted it had achieved only poor sales. In
hindsight it is clear that linear tape formats are not as versatile or robust as disc type formats, and the advent of recordable
CD discs makes the use of tape obsolete for consumer applications.
Professional recording studios still use DAT machines for their
higher sample rate (48kHz), and frequently for their portability. ADAT machines are also still in widespread use in the recording industry.
Links
- DCC (http://www.xs4all.nl/~jacg/philips/dcc.html)
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