Electronics Home Theatre
Home cinema
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A large projection screen in a media room.Home cinema, also called
home theater, are entertainment systems that seek to reproduce movie
theater quality video and audio in a private home. In the 1950s,
home movies became popular in the United States with Kodak 8 mm
film projector equipment becoming affordable. The development of
multi-channel audio systems and laserdisc in the 1980s created a
new paradigm for home cinema. In the early to mid 1990s, a typical
home cinema would have a Laserdisc or S-VHS videocassette player
fed to a large rear projection television. In the late 1990s, home
theatre technology progressed with the development of DVD, Dolby
Digital 5.1-channel audio ("surround sound"), and High-Definition
Television.
In the 2000s, the term "home cinema" encompasses a range of systems.
The most basic system could be a DVD player, a standard CRT television,
and a "home theater in a box", a 2.1 speaker system with left and
right speakers and a small 8" subwoofer cabinet. An expensive home
cinema set-up might include a Blu-ray player, a 60" High-Definition
Television with a "cinema-style" 16:9 format, a several thousand-watt
home theatre receiver with five to seven surround sound speakers,
and a powered subwoofer with a 12" (or more) driver. The most expensive
home theater set-ups, which can cost over $100,000 US, have digital
projectors, expensive screens, and custom-built screening rooms
which include cinema-style chairs and Audiophile-grade sound equipment.
Contents [hide]
1 Design
1.1 Home Theatre Flow Diagram
2 Component systems vs. Theater-in-a-Box
3 Dedicated home theaters
3.1 Home Theater Seating
4 Backyard theater
5 History
5.1 1950s and 1960s
5.2 1980s
5.3 1990s and 2000s
6 See also
7 External sites
8 References

Design
Today, "home cinema" implies a real "cinema experience" and therefore
a higher quality set of components than the average television provides.
A typical home theater includes the following parts:
Input Devices: One or more audio/video sources. High quality formats
such as Blu-ray are preferred, though they often include a VHS player
or Video Game Systems. Some home theatres now include a home theater
PC to act as a library for video and music content.
Processing Devices: Input devices are processed by either a standalone
AV receiver or a Preamplifier and Sound Processor for complex surround
sound formats. The user selects the input at this point before it
is forwarded to the output.
Audio Output: Systems consist of at least 2 speakers, but can have
up to 10 with additional subwoofer.
Video Output: A large HDTV display. Options include Liquid crystal
display television (LCD), video projector, plasma TV, rear-projection
TV, or a traditional CRT TV.
Atmosphere: Comfortable seating and organization to improve the
cinema feel. Higher-end home theaters commonly also have sound insulation
to prevent noise from escaping the room, and a specialized wall
treatment to balance the sound within the room.
Home Theatre Flow Diagram
Flow Diagram
Component systems vs. Theater-in-a-Box
High-quality home cinemas are assembled from component pieces purchased
separately to provide the best combination of equipment for the
cost. It is possible to purchase home theater in a box kits that
include a set of speakers for surround sound, an amplifier/tuner
for adjusting volume and selecting video sources, and sometimes
a DVD player. Though these kits often pale in comparison to a custom-built
home cinema, they are inexpensive and easy to set up; one needs
only to add a television and some movies in order to create a simple
home theater. This makes them popular in the public's eyes.
Dedicated home theaters
A home theater with video projector mounted in a box on the ceiling.
Built-in shelves provide a place for movie decor, DVDs, and equipment.
Note the component stack on the right, where the audio receiver,
DVD player, secondary monitor, and video game system are located.
A DIY audio home theater system in a barnSome home cinema enthusiasts
go so far as to build a dedicated room in the home for the theater.
These more advanced installations often include sophisticated acoustic
design elements, including "room-in-a-room" construction that isolates
sound and provides the potential for a nearly ideal listening environment.
These installations are often designated as "screening rooms" to
differentiate from simpler installations.
This idea can go as far as completely recreating an actual cinema,
with a projector enclosed in a projection booth, specialized furniture,
a piano or theatre organ, curtains in front of the projection screen,
movie posters, or a popcorn or snack machine. More commonly, real
dedicated home theaters pursue this to a lesser degree. Presently
the days of the $100,000 and over home theater is being usurped
by the rapid advances in digital audio and video technologies, which
has spurred a rapid drop in prices. This in turn has brought the
true digital home theater experience to the doorsteps of the do-it-yourself
people, often for less than what you would expect to pay for a low
budget economy car. Current consumer level A/V equipment can meet
and often exceed in performance what you would expect to experience
at a modern commercial theater.

Home Theater Seating
Home theater seating consists of chairs specifically engineered
and designed for viewing movies in a personal home theater setting.
Most home theater seats have cup holder built into the chairs' armrests
and a shared armrest between each seat. Some seating is movie theater-style
chairs like those seen in a movie cinema, which features a flip
up seat cushion. Other seating systems have plush leather reclining
lounger types, with flip-out footrests. Additional features like
storage compartments, snack trays, tactile transducers (nicknamed
"Bass Shakers"), or even electric motors to recline the chair are
available, depending on the model.
Backyard theater
In places that have the proper outdoor atmosphere, it is possible
for people to set up a home theater in their backyard. Depending
on the space available, it may simply be a temporary version with
foldable screen, a projector and couple of speakers, or a permanent
fixture with huge screens and dedicated audio set up poolside. Due
to the outdoor nature, it is quite popular with BBQ parties and
pool parties.
Some specialist outdoor home cinema companies are now marketing
packages with inflatable movie screens and purpose built AV systems.[1]
Some people have built upon the idea, and constructed mobile drive-in
theaters that can play movies in public open spaces. Usually, these
require a powerful projector, a laptop or DVD player, outdoor speakers
and/or an FM transmitter to broadcast the audio to other car radios.[2][3]

History
1950s and 1960s
In the 1950s, home movies became popular in the United States and
elsewhere as Kodak 8 mm film (Pathé 9.5 mm in France) and camera
and projector equipment became affordable. Projected with a small,
portable movie projector onto a portable screen, often without sound,
this system became the first practical home theater. They were generally
used to show home movies of family travels and celebrations but
also doubled as a means of showing private stag films. Dedicated
home cinemas were called screening rooms at the time and were outfitted
with 16 mm or even 35 mm projectors for showing commercial films.
These were found almost exclusively in the homes of the very wealthy,
especially those in the movie industry.
Portable home cinemas improved over time with color film, Kodak
Super 8 mm film film cartridges, and monaural sound but remained
awkward and somewhat expensive. The rise of home video in the late
1970s almost completely killed the consumer market for 8 mm film
cameras and projectors, as VCRs connected to ordinary televisions
provided a simpler and more flexible substitute.
1980s
The development of multi-channel audio systems and laserdisc in
the 1980s added new dimensions for home cinema. The first known
home cinema system was installed as a sales tool at Kirshmans furniture
store in Metairie, Louisiana in 1974. They built a special sound
room which incorporated the earliest quadraphonic audio systems
and modified Sony trinitron televisions for projecting the image.
Many systems were sold in the New Orleans area in the ensuing years
before the first public demonstration of this integration occurred
in 1982 at the Summer Consumer Electronics Show in Chicago, Illinois.
Peter Tribeman of NAD (USA) organized and presented a demonstration
made possible by the collaborative effort of NAD, Proton, ADS, Lucasfilm
and Dolby Labs who contributed their technologies to demonstrate
what a home cinema would "look and sound" like.
Over the course of three days, retailers, manufacturers, and members
of the consumer electronics press were exposed to the first "home
like" experience of combining a high quality video source with multi-channel
surround sound. That one demonstration is credited with being the
impetus for developing what is now a multi-billion dollar business.
1990s and 2000s
In the early to mid 90's, a typical Home Cinema would have a Laserdisc
or S-VHS player fed to a large screen: rear projection for the more
affordable setups, and LCD or CRT front projection in the more elaborate.
In the late 1990s, the development of DVD, 5.1-channel audio, and
high-quality video projectors that provide a cinema experience at
a price that rivals a big-screen HDTVs sparked a new wave of home
cinema interest. In the 2000s, developments such as High Definition
video, Blu-ray Disc and newer HD display technologies enable people
to enjoy a cinematic feeling in their own home at an affordable
price
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