Do you remember ReBoot? If you were into early CGI, the name probably rings a bell, since when it premiered in 1994 it was the first fully computer-animated show on TV. Some time ago, a group found a pile of tapes from Mainframe Studios in Canada, the people behind ReBoot, and the computer historians amongst us were very excitedβ¦ until they turned out to be digital broadcast master tapes. Exciting for fans of lost media, sure, but not quite the LTO backups of Mainframeβs SGI workstations some of us had hoped would turn up. Still, [Mark Westhaver], [Bryan Baker] and others at the βReBoot Rewindβ project have made great strides, to the point that in their latest update video they declare βWe Saved ReBootβ
What does it take to revive a 30-year-old television project? Well, as stated, they started with the tapes. These arenβt ordinary VHS tapes: the Sony D-1 tapes, which were also known by the moniker β4:2:2β, are a format that most people who didnβt work in the TV or film industry will have never seen, and the tape decks are rare as henβs teeth these days. Just getting a working one, and keeping it working, was one of the biggest challenges [Mark] and Reboot Rewind faced. In the end it took three somewhat-dodgy machines long past their service lives and a miraculously located spare read/write head to get a stable scanning rate.
The uncompressed digital output of these tapes isnβt something you can just burn to a DVD, either. The 720 Γ 576 resolution video stream is captured raw, but there are minor editing tweaks that need to be made in addition to tape errors that have cropped up over the years, and those need to be dealt with before the video and audio data gets encoded into a modern format. The video briefly glosses [Bryan Baker]βs workflow to do just that. At least they arenβt stuck with terrible USB video capture dongles VHS lovers have to deal with. Even if you donβt care about ReBoot,Β this isnβt the only show that was archived on D1 tapes so that workflow might be of interest to media fans.
We covered ReBoot Rewind when they were first searching for tape decks, so itβs great to have an update. Alas, the rights holders havenβt yet decided how exactly theyβre going to release this fine footage, so if like this author you have fond memories of ReBoot,Β you may have to wait a bit longer for a reWatch.