Food & Drink2 mins ago
Videos - are they becoming extinct?
I've noticed that some of the major supermarkets no longer sell videos: all films are in DVD's. Is this a general experience?
Its not a problem for me, but my parents (in their eighties) don't have a DVD machine - they find them difficult to operate, and don't want to change to DVD.
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by beagle1. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Sorry to reply with a link, but, as this article confirms, shops like Dixons are no longer producing tellyboxes with video players/recorders attached, neither are they selling separate devices.
They will be phased out - like records were following the advent of CDs.
Perhaps a happy compromise would be for your parents to buy a DVD player, which is very easy to use, and retain their VCR to record programmes.
The bonus with DVDs is the much-improved picture quality over videos.
But it would be worth them stockpiling as many blank video cassettes as possible, as they are gradually becoming less available- they are cheap as chips as well.
Firms are gradually phasing out video cassettes- so like vinyl records nowadays, they will eventually only be found in specialist shops.
Well I sold mine on Ebay, replaced the ones I really "need" with DVD's. If you have wedding Vidoes and other family thing you want to keep then just play them into a DVD recorder and you've converted them. Magnetic media does deteriorate over time much more so than DVD/CD etc so It's probably a good idea anyway.
You probably can still sell Videos on Ebay but they'll soon become worthless.
I notice that in the big stores like HMV the video ( tape ) section consists almost entirely of Children's videos. I guess most adults are giving their old video machines to their kids to use in their bedrooms.
I remember that when DVD sales were just starting to overtake video ( tape ) sales, some smaller production companies were still releasing old film titles on tape because their customers were in the older age bracket. Like beagle1's parents, those customers were resistant to DVDs.
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