The
NewTek Video Toaster is a combination of
hardware and
software for the editing and production of
NTSC standard-definition video. The plug-in
expansion card initially worked with the
Amiga 2000 computer and provides a number of
BNC connectors on the exposed rear edge that provide connectivity to common analog video sources like
VHS VCRs. The related software tools support
video switching
A vision mixer is a device used to select between several different live video sources and, in some cases, compositing live video sources together to create visual effects.
In most of the world, both the equipment and its operator are called ...
,
chroma keying,
character generation,
animation
Animation is a method by which image, still figures are manipulated to appear as Motion picture, moving images. In traditional animation, images are drawn or painted by hand on transparent cel, celluloid sheets to be photographed and exhibited ...
, and
image manipulation.
Together, the hardware and software provided, for a few thousand U.S. dollars, a video editing suite that rivaled the output of contemporary (i.e. early 1990s) professional systems costing ten times as much. It allowed small studios to produce high-quality material and resulted in a
cottage industry
The putting-out system is a means of subcontracting work. Historically, it was also known as the workshop system and the domestic system. In putting-out, work is contracted by a central agent to subcontractors who complete the project via remote ...
for video production not unlike the success of the
Macintosh in the desktop publishing (
DTP) market only a few years earlier. The Video Toaster won the
Emmy Award
The Emmy Awards, or Emmys, are an extensive range of awards for artistic and technical merit for the American and international television industry. A number of annual Emmy Award ceremonies are held throughout the calendar year, each with the ...
for Technical Achievement in 1993. Other parts of the original software package were spun off as stand-alone products, notably
LightWave 3D, and achieved success on their own.
As the Amiga platform lost market share and
Commodore International went bankrupt in 1994 as a result of declining sales, the Video Toaster was moved to the
Microsoft Windows
Windows is a group of several proprietary graphical operating system families developed and marketed by Microsoft. Each family caters to a certain sector of the computing industry. For example, Windows NT for consumers, Windows Server for serv ...
platform where it is still available. The company also produces what is essentially a portable pre-packaged version of the Video Toaster along with all the computer hardware needed, as the TriCaster. These became all-digital units in 2014, ending production of the analog Video Toaster line.
First generation systems
The Video Toaster was designed by NewTek founder
Tim Jenison in
Topeka,
Kansas. Engineer
Brad Carvey built the first
wire wrap
Wire wrap is an electronic component assembly technique that was invented to wire telephone crossbar switches, and later adapted to construct electronic circuit boards. Electronic components mounted on an insulating board are interconnected by l ...
prototype, and Steve Kell wrote the software for the prototype. Many other people worked on the Toaster as it developed.
The Toaster was announced at the
World of Commodore
World of Commodore is an annual computer expo dedicated to Commodore computers.
The shows were initially organized by Commodore Canada or its sister companies, and took place at the International Centre in Mississauga, Ontario, though in some ...
expo in 1987
and released as a commercial product in December 1990
for the
Commodore Amiga 2000 computer system, taking advantage of the video-friendly aspects of that system's hardware to deliver the product at an unusually low cost of $2,399.
The Amiga was well adapted to this application in that its system clock at was precisely double that of the NTSC color carrier frequency, , allowing for simple synchronization of the video signal. The hardware component is a full-sized card that is installed into the
Amiga 2000's unique single video expansion slot rather than the standard bus slots, and therefore cannot be used with the
A500 or
A1000 models. The card has several
BNC connectors in the rear, which accepts four video input sources and provided two outputs (preview and program). This initial generation system is essentially a real-time four-channel
video switcher.
One feature of the Video Toaster is the inclusion of
LightWave 3D, a 3D modeling, rendering, and animation program. This program became so popular in its own right that in 1994 it was made available as standalone product separate from the Toaster systems.
Aside from simple fades, dissolves, and cuts, the Video Toaster has a large variety of character generation, overlays and complex animated switching effects. These effects are in large part performed with the help of the native Amiga
graphics chipset, which is synchronized to the NTSC video signals. As a result, while the Toaster was rendering a switching animation, the computer desktop display is not visible. While these effects are unique and inventive, they cannot be modified. Soon Toaster effects were seen everywhere, advertising the device as the brand of switcher those particular production companies were using.
The Toaster hardware requires very stable input signals, and therefore is often used along with a separate video
sync time-base corrector to stabilize the video sources. Third-party low-cost time-base correctors (TBCs) specifically designed to work with the Toaster quickly came to market, most of which were designed as standard ISA bus cards, taking advantage of the typically unused Bridgeboard slots. The cards do not use the Bridgeboard to communicate, but simply as a convenient power supply and physical location.
As with all video switchers that use a frame buffer to create DVEs (digital video effects), the video path through the Toaster hardware introduced delays in the signals when the signal was in "digital" mode. Depending on the video setup of the user, this delay could be quite noticeable when viewed along with the corresponding audio, so some users installed audio delay circuits to match the Toaster's video-delay lag, as is common practice in video-switching studios.
A user still needs at least three
video tape recorders (VTR) and a controller to perform
A/B roll linear video editing (LE), as the Toaster serves merely as a switcher, which can be triggered through
general-purpose input/output (GPIO) to switch on cue in such a configuration, as the Toaster has no edit-controlling capabilities. The frame delays passing through the Toaster and other low-cost video switchers make precise editing a frustrating endeavor. Internal cards and software from other manufacturers are available to control VTRs; the most common systems go through the serial port to provide single-frame control of a VTR as a capture device for LightWave animations. A
Non-linear editing system (NLE) product was added later, with the invention of the Video Toaster Flyer.
Although initially offered as just an add-on to an Amiga, the Video Toaster was soon available as a complete turn-key system that included the Toaster, Amiga, and sync generator. These Toaster systems became very popular, primarily because at a cost of around US$5,000, they could do much of what a $100,000 fully professional video switcher (such as an
Evans & Sutherland) could do at that time. The Toaster was also the first such video device designed around a general-purpose personal computer that is capable of delivering
broadcast quality NTSC signals.
As such, during the early 1990s the Toaster was widely used by consumer
Amiga
Amiga is a family of personal computers introduced by Commodore in 1985. The original model is one of a number of mid-1980s computers with 16- or 32-bit processors, 256 KB or more of RAM, mouse-based GUIs, and significantly improved graphi ...
owners,
desktop video enthusiasts, and local
television studios, and was even used during ''
The Tonight Show'' regularly to produce special effects for
comedy skits. It was often easy to detect a studio that used the Toaster by the unique and recognizable special switching effects. The
NBC television network also used the Video Toaster with LightWave for its promotional campaigns, beginning with the 1990-1991 broadcast season ("NBC: The Place To Be!"). All of the external submarine shots in the TV series ''
seaQuest DSV
''SeaQuest DSV'' (stylized as ''seaQuest DSV'' and also promoted as simply ''seaQuest'') is an American science fiction television series created by Rockne S. O'Bannon. It originally aired on NBC between 1993 and 1996. In its final season, it ...
'' were created using
LightWave 3D, as were the outer-space scenes in the TV series ''
Babylon 5'' (although Amiga hardware was only used for the first three seasons). Because of the heavy use of dark blues and greens (for which the NTSC television standard is weak), the external submarine shots in ''seaQuest DSV'' could not have made it to air without the use of the ASDG Abekas driver, written specifically to solve this problem by Aaron Avery at ASDG (later
Elastic Reality
Elastic Reality was a warping and morphing software application available on Windows, Macintosh, and Silicon Graphics workstations and was discontinued in 1999.
Features
The workflow of the application is based around drawing source and destinati ...
, Inc.).
An updated version calle
Video Toaster 4000was later released, using the
Amiga 4000's video slot. The 4000 was co-developed by actor
Wil Wheaton, who worked on product testing and quality control.
[Nathan Rabin]
Wil Wheaton interview
'' The A.V. Club'', November 20, 2002. He later used his public profile to serve as a
technology evangelist for the product.
The Amiga Video Toaster 4000
source code was released in 2004 by NewTek & DiscreetFX.
Video Toaster Flyer
For the second generation NewTek introduced the Video Toaster Flyer. The Flyer is a much more capable
non-linear editing system. In addition to just processing live video signals, the Flyer makes use of
hard drives to store video clips as well as audio and allow complex scripted playback. The Flyer is capable of simultaneous dual-channel playback, which allows the Toaster's
video switcher to perform transitions and other effects on
video clips without the need for
rendering.
The hardware component is again a card designed for the Amiga's
Zorro II expansion slot, and was primarily designed by Charles Steinkuehler. The Flyer portion of the Video Toaster/Flyer combination is a complete computer of its own, having its own
microprocessor and
embedded software, which was written by Marty Flickinger. Its hardware includes three embedded
SCSI
Small Computer System Interface (SCSI, ) is a set of standards for physically connecting and transferring data between computers and peripheral devices. The SCSI standards define commands, protocols, electrical, optical and logical interface ...
controllers. Two of these SCSI buses are used to store video data, and the third to store audio. The hard drives are thus connected to the Flyer directly and use a proprietary filesystem layout, rather than being connected to the Amiga's buses and were available as regular devices using the included
DOS driver. The Flyer uses a proprietary
wavelet compression algorithm known as
VTASC, which was well-regarded at the time for offering better visual quality than comparable
motion-JPEG-based nonlinear editing systems.
One of the card's primary uses is for playing back
LightWave 3D animations created in the Toaster.
Video Toaster Screamer
In 1993, NewTek announced the ''Video Toaster Screamer'', a parallel extension to the Toaster built by
DeskStation Technology
DeskStation Technology was a manufacturer of RISC-based computer workstations intended to run Windows NT. DeskStation was based in Lenexa, Kansas.
MIPS-based systems
In late 1991, DeskStation announced a workstation based on the MIPS R3000A CPU, ...
, with four motherboards, each with a MIPS
R4400 CPU running at and of RAM. The Screamer accelerated the rendering of animations developed using the Toaster's bundled Lightwave 3D software, and is supposedly 40 times as powerful as a Toaster 4000. Only a handful of test units were produced before NewTek abandoned the project and refocused on the Flyer. This cleared the way for DeskStation Technology to release their own cut-down version, the Raptor.
Later generations
Later generations of the product run on
Windows NT PCs. In 2004, the source code for the Amiga version was publicly released and hosted on DiscreetFX's site Open Video Toaster. With the additions of packages such as DiscreetFX's Millennium and thousands of wipes and backgrounds added over the years, one can still find the Video Toaster system in use today in fully professional systems. NewTek renamed the VideoToaster to "VideoToaster
, and later, "VT
for the PC version and is now at version 5.3. Since VT
version 4.6,
SDI switching is supported through an add-on called SX-SDI.
NewTek released a spin-off product, known as the TriCaster, a portable live-production, live-projection, live-streaming, and NLE system. The TriCaster packages the VT system as a turnkey solution in a custom-designed portable PC case with video, audio and remote computer inputs and outputs on the front and back of the case. As of April 2008, four versions are in production: the basic TriCaster 2.0, TriCaster PRO 2.0, TriCaster STUDIO 2.0 and the new TriCaster BROADCAST, the latter of which adds SDI and AES-EBU connectivity plus a preview output capability. The TriCasterPRO FX, a model that was situated in line between the original TriCaster PRO and TriCaster STUDIO was introduced in early 2008, and has now been discontinued. Its feature set has been added to the new TriCaster PRO 2.0. TriCaster STUDIO 2.0 and TriCaster BROADCAST use successively larger cases than the base model TriCaster 2.0. The units within the product line above the base-model TriCaster 2.0 enables use of LiveSet 3D Live Virtual Set technology developed by NewTek, that replaces tens of thousands of U.S. dollars worth of conventional 3D virtual set equipment alone, and is also found in NewTek's venerable VT
Integrated Production Suite, the modern-day successor to the original Video Toaster.
In late 2009, NewTek released its high definition version of the TriCaster, called the TriCaster XD300, a three-input HD system. It is able to accept a variety formats (NTSC, 720p, or 1080i; and on multi-standard systems, PAL) that can be mixed to downstream keys. The XD300 also features five M/E style virtual inputs, permitting up to three video sources in one source, accessible like any other input on the switcher.
At NAB Show 2010 NewTek announced its TCXD850, a rack-mountable eight-input switcher with 22 channels. It was released July 15, 2010.
Decline
By 2009, the Video Toaster started to receive less attention from NewTek in the run-up to the transition to HD systems. In December 2010, the discontinuation of VT
was announced, marking the end of the Video Toaster as a stand-alone product. TriCaster systems based on the VT platform were still made up until August 2012, when the TriCaster STUDIO was replaced by the TriCaster 40. This officially marked the end of the Video Toaster.
Subprograms
*''ToasterCG'' is the
character generation program inside Video Toaster.
*''ToasterEdit'' is a video-editing subprogram inside of Video Toaster.
*''ToasterPaint'' is a digital painting subprogram inside of Video Toaster.
See also
*
LightWave 3D, another high-end graphical system offered by Newtek
*
Quantel Paintbox, earlier (1981) system
References
External links
*{{dmoz, Computers/Software/Graphics/3D/Animation_and_Design_Tools/Video_Toaster, Video Toaster
An episode of Computer Chronicles featuring the Video Toaster on the Amiga 2000
Amiga software
Amiga
Video editing software
Video editing software for Windows
Multimedia
Multimedia software
New media