Last Major Supplier Calls It Quits For VHS
thefickler writes "The last major supplier of VHS videotapes is ditching the format in favor of DVD, effectively killing the format for good. This uncharitable commentator has this to say: 'Will VHS be missed? Not ... with videos being brittle, clunky, and rather user-unfriendly. But they ushered in a new era that was important to get to where we are today. And for that reason, the death of VHS is rather sad. Almost as sad as the people still using it.'" At least my dad's got the blank-tape market cornered.
first - nothing better to do on christmas day
I recently had the challenge of trying to find a VHS player in a retail store. I couldn't find one, so in that sense the format has been dead a long time. Now that no major manufacturer is producing new media, I wonder in how many years the last playable VHS cassette will wear out. 20? 50? Will there even be an operable player at that time, that can output video into a then-standard format?
It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
Is more in order than first...
doesn's become the next supplier in line the major supplier automatically?
When that supplier also stops we have a duplicate newsreport. Slashdor will surely report this since this is a tradition.
VHS wil be like BSD... dead.
Except for TiVo there still remains no replacement for VHS's ease of use. Pop in a tape, hit record. I know that there are DVD recorders that can do this but at least a year ago you still had to worry about DVD type, ending a track, etc.
A large portion of the populace does not have a TiVo or a DVD recorder - meaning they lost functionality.
Ah yes, never. In a related point, Sony lays off thousands. That's some great plan you got there, Lou.
How on earth can a story about VHS not be tagged as pr0n?
Posted anonymously so my ex and her lawyer won't use it against me!!!
Don't most store security systems use VHS tapes for their security cameras?
If they switch to non-erasable DVD, there's going to be a metric ton of these that just go to waste every day.
Weaselmancer
rediculous.
When you try to play your DVD-RWs. No, seriously. I've got a Hauppauge PVR150 in my desktop (Salvaged from the sad remains of the first Mythbok that died...) and I've been using it rip my parents old home movies recorded to VHS. These tapes are 20 years old and play great. The question is, what the heck can I burn it to so it might survive 30 more years?
Probably not, although there will probably still be paid services available than can convert them to digital media.
Unless it's a major-studio pre-recorded VHS tape that hasn't been rereleased on DVD, such as the PAL release of Disney's Song of the South. These paid services will likely refuse such a transfer request on copyright grounds unless perhaps your name is Bob Iger.
I still have one, but I never buy disks for it. I dont really use DVDs that much even. The storage market has evolved enough that we dont really need it most of the time.
...the same supplier is providing video tape transfers to DVD for free.
That way we don't have to buy dvd copies of movies of already paid for.
http://www.thinkgeek.com/electronics/digital-conversion/
There are lots of services and gadgets around to do VHS to Digital. These guys sell something like that, I think.
Often wrong but never in doubt.
I am Jack9.
Everyone knows me.
One thing the article does not state is the identity of the last major supplier of VHS tapes. I would guess it would be someone like 3M or BASF.
Dupe: The VHS is Dead
I've told you, betamax win at the end! no wait...
Although I haven't been in a store that sold new VHS tapes in years, I'm a little apprehensive.
While it is true that many shows have been re-released in DVD format, there are plenty of titles that did not (and/or will not) see re-release. In many cases, these aren't "essential" or "good" works, but film historians often use relics of the past to show the evolution of a director's style or the level of technological development at the time. They might also use these works to show the political climate of the country it was produced in, or as a source for historical evaluation.
If you need to make a film based in 1988, wouldn't it be nice if you had a lot of filmed material from 1988? What if you can't get access to what you know you need because it was all copyrighted, but never released on DVD? What if you can't find a collector who's willing to sell you their VHS tapes?
I don't think it's a fault so much of VHS going out of the market, but of copyright law. It's easy to find a VCR, or a tape deck or a record player, but finding a specific release from those mediums is nearly impossible without extensive searching, often commanding high prices from collectors. If that material was considered out of copyright, I could take my library and digitize it, throw up a torrent, and *poof* it's around for forever.. but because I can't, it will sit around until I'm an old man before there's even a glimmer of hope that it might be made available to the public.
present day... present time... hahahaha...
I can buy tapes made by Maxell, Fuji, Emtec, Sony and Acme (at least I can buy all of them locally, did not try eBay...). Which manufacturer has stopped making tapes? I probably should buy a lot of them because I still record to VHS.
Now, I know DVD has higher video quality and is cheaper (the media at least), but can DVD recorders join recorded parts seamlessly (sp?) ? What I mean - When I am recording some TV show and a commercial starts, I just press stop on the VCR. When the commercial ends, I press record. The result is smooth, as if the commercial was never there. I can do the same when I connect two VCRs to cut commercials out of a TV show that I had recorded by setting the VCR to do so without my presence. Can DVD and/or hard drive recorders do so?
I ask because I used to record TV shows using my PC and a TV tuner, but I always had problems - the PC was too slow to start recording (like 5 seconds after I pressed "record" it actually started recording) and each recording was in a different file, sometimes the file did not have sound, or video...
Almost as sad as the people still using it.
You push it in the slot, push Play, and it works. No menus to wander, no special features to get in the way, no Director's Cut, no frigging mind games with some dinky remote with tiny print and bitty buttons to poke at to get the bloody thing to play, now. Get off my lawn! Damn kids these days... Harumph. Where did I put my bifocals?
This message sponsored by AARP, because you'll be old someday, too!
Pacifist paratroopers yell, "Ghandi!" when they jump.
In an unfortunate choice of name the Croatians have named their new assault rifle VHS.
I suppose it could have been given a worse name... such as BETAMAX or HDDVD.
http://www.thefirearmblog.com/blog/2008/12/16/new-croatian-vhs-assault-rifle/
I read (most of) the article, and as far as I can tell, this is about VHS tapes which have movies on them, not blanks for you to record on your own.
Weird Stuff Warehouse has a bunch of used VCRs...
While I mostly like DVD's, there is one thing about them that have always angered me. With VHS, you could pop in the tape, hit Fast Forward, and cruise by the 10 minutes of crap at the front of the tape (Copyright Warning, obsolete trailers, etc). I sure wish some DVD maker would produce a unit that would let me skip right to the main menu on a DVD, instead of forcing me to sit through that first 5-10 minutes of filler. I just want to watch the movie, already, and it seems to me that if it's *my* DVD player, it ought to obey *me*, not the disc producer.
Even though I no longer own any VHS tapes myself, I have a dual-player that I'm going to hang on to. My family has a lot of video memories that are still on VHS, and it's unlikely they'll be converted anytime soon.
In fact, I'll probably try to get a mid-range VHS player (one of the small ones) once I have a bit of extra cash, and just store that away. Either it will come in handy for myself, or in 50 years I can sell it for a tidy sum to someone who needs one.
I'm also reminded of a certain Cowboy Bebop episode. Of course, they actually needed a Betamax player and got a VHS deck at first, but the same idea holds.
I RTFA (hey, it's Christmas!) and using my advanced English comprehension skills can hereby inform you that it's about what's apparently the last major supplier of content in the VHS format in the USA giving up on VHS. It says nothing about manufacturers of VHS media (aka blank tapes) stopping production.
I bet blank tapes will be available for a good few years yet.
this is about REDISTRIBUTOR, not a blank VHS producer or publishing house. really the whole snippet is very misleading.
they say it is often more relevant then the comment above, all we know is its called the Sig!
BS, why should someone change when what they have works fine?
Just because its new and shiny and you don't care doesn't make you a sad loser. It means you don't succumb to marketing.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
> The *real* question is, who cares?
> For the majority of us, after enough time passes our lives are pretty much irrelevant.
Well that may be the case for you, because history is irrelevant to you.
But if you could see the ebbs and flows and textures of history across many generations, you'd be able to see how significant a life can be and how seemingly minor events and decision can affect generations to come. You'd see that the winds of change that appear to erode any value and meaning out of life, do little more than blow away the irrelevant fluff off a person's life to reveal the deep grooves of that person's purpose.
R.I.P. list:
Beta
HDDVD
VHS
Which one is next?
DVD?
BlueRay?
But actually, VHS was a really good understandable, because you knew exactly what was happening, the video was recorded onto the tap and the tap moved along and the video played. It was all very mechanical and logical. It wasn't fast or high def, and god knows they'd break easy, but with CD, DVD, HDD, HD DVD, Blu-ray you have to learn 20 000 000 different formats, plus there isn't the same direct logic to it, it's like the video is stored on this shiny magnetic layer, and you directly skip from one place to another.
The referenced article discusses prerecorded VHS tapes. Blank media is still readily available.
My peace of mind does not depend on
Buried below stone plates with the engraved pictures, we can place punch-cards (made from platimum coeated tungsten) for binary formats and engraved text for text formats.
I suggest the following set to understand todays state of the internet:
-a messed up word document containing an non-logical formated cruelly layouted document
-frames from a porn movie
-a spam mail, ehich demonstrates how to encode mail in multiple character sets (i imagine this would give them a headache....)
-a crazy frog mobile ringtone
-a flash game
When you can make a bit for bit perfect copy of a DVD in under 3 minutes at a cost of 20 some cents, the fact that the media degrades is a non issue.
Hell, I can fit 15 or so DVD quality movies on my key chain (32 GB microSD keyfob). You really think in 5-10 years you're still going to be playing DVDs? Give me a break. By then you'll have copied all your stuff to some other format.
For the day that users could fast forward past the FBI warning is now gone. And so as remember this day, let us recall those guiding words: Be Kind. Rewind.
I noticed a lot of people, with VCRs including myself, still use VCR to do mostly recordings. Since most digital to analog TV converter boxes do not have schedulers and older VCR models don't know the new channels, this would also add the death of VHS tapes and VCRs.
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
... are there any local store-bought DVRs that do not require paid subscrptions, can store onto HDDs and DVDs, support HDTV, lets me connect to computers to transfer video recording files (back and forth), etc.? The last time I checked, they didn't exist. I also don't want to use computers to be my DVRs since they tend to crash (e.g., programs, blue screens, bugs), I like to modify/upgrade them, etc.
Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
Techblorge commentator is wrong on every count (except maybe the actual distributor not distributing tapes): ... with videos being brittle, clunky, and rather user-unfriendly. But they ushered in a new era that was important to get to where we are today. And for that reason, the death of VHS is rather sad. Almost as sad as the people still using it.'""
"'Will VHS be missed? Not
Brittle: They are not brittle at all. Compare a VHS tape to a DVD, saying the VHS is brittle is a bad joke. DVD format was originally going to be a cartridge format, they ditched the cartridge to save costs, making the DVD much easier to scratch, smudge, or break.
Clunky: Well they're a bit big I do grant that. In terms of actual use, it's like put it in the machine and hit play though (so it's not really clunky to use.)
user-unfriendly: The user puts in the tape, rewinds it if it's not rewound, hits play. They can skip the FBI warning and ads, unlike a DVD. Hit rewind at the end and then eject. Not unfriendly at all. Oh, AND, the user could RECORD to a VHS tape. Which they can't do with DVDs.
Ushered in a new era: Actually that was Betamax. Although VHS really helped.
The prediction (in the article) that DVD will be obsoleted in 3-4 years by Blu-Ray is also absurd I think. Formats just don't go from dominance to zero that fast, and there seems to be little interest in high-def in general among many people; others (me included) are not interested in the heavy rights restrictions present in Blu-Ray... my 1080p download of 2001 looks beautiful though.
And to head things off, for those who have not seen a good VHS tape, I'm sure eventually someone is going to go off on how bad VHS looks. It doesn't. I have a THX VHS copy of the Star Wars trilogy, and in addition to correctly having Solo shoot first, it also looked VERY good last time I played them. (I currently have no VCR...). If a tape (or VCR) is in poor condition you get some speckles in the picture, otherwise it looks good. (Most people who say VHS looks bad are using worn-out players or tapes). The on-paper resolution may be a little lower than DVD, *BUT* there's no macroblocking or digital artifacts that so many DVDs seem to suffer from (due to either a company wanting to squeeze on too many extras, or simply lazy mastering.) A *good* DVD looks better than top-quality VHS, but most DVDs are not that high-quality.
-------
To be clear I'm not advocating still using VHS, it's done for. But it's not the piece of crap Techblorge makes it out to be.
Just as my parents figured out how to set the VCR clock.
DVDs are a scratchfest. It's somewhat sad.
The World Wide Web is dying. Soon, we shall have only the Internet.
"Killing the format" no sir, I think not, I've little doubt that just like the Compact Cassette the VHS will remain as at least a viable format (and probably the dominant format) in markets from Eastern Europe to China and probably a vast majority of Africa and South America for many many years after the western markets abandon it.
its all on the internet by now anyway
A lot of the big name artists (think the Beatles and Led Zeppelin, for example) did get their back catalogues reissued in CD, but a lot of musically-interesting stuff did not make it to the new format.
So, you're stuck unless you want to fire up a turntable or muck around with converters
I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
they might stop making movies but dvd/vcr combo systems and blank media are still going strong. however settop dvd recorders are also getting very cheap to get. as for dvd vs blueray its just not going to happon dvd is going to be around for a long time.
Unfortunately a device like this is too desirable to be manufactured, but heres something close:
http://www.bhphotovideo.com/bnh/controller/home?O=7049&A=details&Q=&sku=448811&is=REG&addedTroughType=categoryNavigation#specifications
It:
-does not require a paid subscription
-can store onto both the internal 250GByte hard drive and direct to DVD (also MiniDV if youre interested)
-connects to your computer via firewire so you can capture whatever you want. You can also pull content from the hard drive directly to your computer as it saves to either MPEG-2 or DV-AVI.
-is fairly expensive at $1,299
It does not:
-support HD
-tune programs natively; I/O is done through RCA or Component inputs
I dunno if youre going to find anything much closer.
Joey
I have to return some video tapes.
You shouldn't just throw that stuff away. You should donate that stuff to some poor areas of Africa or something noble like that. You can donate your old TVs (because USA is going all-digital), and any educational VHS tapes + equipment to schools in rural Africa.
Ha Ha Ha.
DD 5.1 has been out for years and years and DVD never recorded it.
DVD doesn't record HD.
D-VHS RECORDS HD (!)
Hummmm... Sounds like someone gypped the Consumer... again...
As far as BR goes, it will never be a VHS replacement since it will never be cheap. (Before it becomes cheap, it will be overshadowed by the next format that will be bigger and even more expensive.)
Consumer recording is pretty much over.
Aside from the prohibitively expensive shipping costs, and african electric being 220V/50Hz, there is also the issue that CRTs from the USA may not operate correctly in the southern hemisphere
VHS tapes play a vital role when dealing with children, and certain mental disabilities that lack "normal" dexterity.
Anyone who's had more than one child try to handle a movie knows this. DVD & Blu-ray formats may have higher capacity, but they are nowhere near as durable.
I'll remember that next time a rental DVD jumps back to the menu screen after hitting a scratch halfway through the film it can't read past, or when I'm forced to wait through ten minutes of promos before the film because I can't fast forward through them anymore.
So you'll know grandma is still available.
Shai Schticks:"You don't make peace with friends, you make peace with enemies"
"I don't think it's a fault so much of VHS going out of the market, but of copyright law. It's easy to find a VCR, or a tape deck or a record player, but finding a specific release from those mediums is nearly impossible without extensive searching, often commanding high prices from collectors. If that material was considered out of copyright, I could take my library and digitize it, throw up a torrent, and *poof* it's around for forever.. but because I can't, it will sit around until I'm an old man before there's even a glimmer of hope that it might be made available to the public."
You're making too many assumptions here. One you're assuming someone will either have the expertise and time to do the torrent conversion for you (up to acceptable standards), or the desire to. You're assuming that the internet is a viable backup retrieval medium. What I put in now will be exactly (assuming I can retrieve it. not always the case) what I get back, when I want it. That has nothing persey with it being digital, but simple human meddling for both practical reasons, and just human nature. In short your problem isn't copyright, but the simple fact we live in a physical world with physical consequences, the presence or absence of copyright isn't going to change that. You're hope that there's going to be thousands of copies to depend up as backup is an unsustainable presumption.
A very cursory search shows me players starting at around $115. Define 'affordable'? They've come down a HUGE amount in price already.
DVDs get written and read with lasers, 'heat' is just a side effect. Lasers emit coherent photons, and light _is_ electroMAGNETIC waves, you silly!
Or was that a particularly strange joke on your part?
"almost as sad as the people still using it"
Is it as sad as getting half way through a good movie to have it freeze up, then need to be started again, then not be allowed to fast forward through the 15 minutes of previews, only to find out that this particular DVD doesn't recognize my universal remote's signal to move between chapters?
Of the public schools I have worked in, in two states, their video libraries consisted of 90% VHS tapes.
Some valuable teaching tools (videos) are going to be really difficult to find on DVD, and a lot of them just won't be found.
I am not saying VHS should stick around, but as the format dies there will be a somewhat substantial loss.
I don't want to write an epic rely here, but you really ought to go into older high school's libraries to see what I'm talking about. Even if they have the tapes (which wear out eventually), not having VHS players that work is going to be an issue.
I'm thinking, expensive heavy-duty mechanism, transparent casing made of sheets of toughened glass held together with brass edging, gold-plated chassis mounted on pillars above a toughened mirrored glass base, replace some of the cheaper mechanical components with nicer-looking custom parts, add a few internal mirors at strategic places.
Then charge several grand for it, like it's an antique glass-domed carriage clock or something.
Make it like the Faberge version of a VHS recorder, so that future generations can ooh and ahh at the mechanism as they watch all the little intricate moving parts jumping out and doing their thing when you load a tape.
Heck, in a few years time you'll probably be able to sell 'em to science museums as exhibits.
Eric Baird
/me now has jimmy hendrix hair
Videos are very user friendly. There is forward and back. When you stop it, take it out and start it again, it carries on where you left off. I think they are the best way to time-shift TV, and, importantly you can record something for someone else and play it on their VCR.
I have a Sky+ in the UK that allows one to record, but there is no (easy) way of getting the off it.
DVDs seem to be filled with shit at the start that can't be skipped and then there is some crappy menu system to work out.
Why isn't a video user friendly? Really? My grandparents can use them, but not a computer or a DVD player...isn't that a good mark of true user friendliness?
It's been a long time that I wanted to record something to VHS (though this may have to do with what's currently being broadcast) but my DVR has an option; "Copy to VHS". Someone better tell the makers of the latest recording technology that one of it's earlier predecessors has bit the dust.
Greg
My parents still have a nice 6-head SVHS deck that I helped them buy around 10 years ago just before DVD hit. (I have one as well) This seems disappointing because in the US at least, DVD recorders never caught on, and DVRs still aren't that ubiquitous as they're mostly service-related unless you DYI.
Ironically enough they never got a single SVHS tape due to the high cost. (Don't think I ever saw them for less than $6-7 a tape) But it has a recording mode that produces near-SVHS quality on standard VHS tapes.
I'll have to tell them to stock up on some more blank tapes, as they really aren't the technical type. I tried getting them to get a DVR, but they don't want the extra cost when what they have still works fine.
I'm often busy when TV prgrams I like air, so I record them for later viewing. I recently switched from VHS to a DVD recorder.
I have found that many programs cannot be recorded on DVD. The broadcasters can send a signal that blocks the DVD recorder from recording the program.
Many times I have sat down to watch a program recorded earlier, only to find it never recorded (and the error message displayed by the DVD player "Copy prohibited program")
Other times I have sound but no picture.
Once I found only 16 minutes of an hour program recorded - just the commercials!
This problem does not occur on VHS recorders, and is the one reason I really miss them.
I guess I'll be get around to that by 2038.
HexaByte - he's a square and a half!
When I was a kid for some reason I remember thinking that if you were rich then you had one of those dedicated rewinders so you wouldn't have to wait for your tape to finish. I don't know why I thought that, I just did. Those were the good old days... Copy protection was so much easier to overcome and it seems like fair use was more respected by both the producers and consumers. I may be wrong though. Call it a function of me being so young back then.
> Will VHS be missed? Not ... with videos being brittle, clunky, and rather user-unfriendly
What's the basis of comparison? I would argue that at this point the major alternative is DVD, which is a lot *MORE* brittle and *extremely* user-unfriendly. And if there's anything clunkier than the assortment of different kinds of not-so-good cases that DVDs come in, I'm sure I don't know what it is. Really VHS would be a huge improvement over DVD.
In terms of user-friendliness, VHS is pretty hard to beat. You put the thing in and it *just plays*. No fiddling, no menus to navigate, no figuring out which buttons do what (which actually varies from one DVD to another), and if you want to fast forward or rewind you *can*, but if you don't want to mess with buttons the tape will play to the end and, in most VCRs, automatically rewind and eject when it's done, so you literally don't have to push a single button. You just put the tape in the player and that's *all* you have to do. Okay, so you do have to manage to not put the tape in backwards, which I guess might be hard if you have the same level of intelligence as a garden slug.
The brittleness claim would have more merit, if the alternative weren't DVD. Sure, if you beat up on a VHS tape too much it'll break. But at least you don't have to be too worried about what happens if you get a *scratch* on it, for crying out loud.
I suppose "clunky" can mean a lot of different things...
Cut that out, or I will ship you to Norilsk in a box.
Two days ago when I was home for the holidays my Mom asked me to fix something with the TV. I asked her what was wrong and she said that her VCR wouldn't let her record something while she was watching something different.
:)
I would love to bring her out of the 80's, but what other options does a person have who is completely averse to paying for something that they feel they don't need? I would suggest Tivo, but there is a monthly fee. I would suggest a cable set top box w/ DVR, but she is still on basic cable because digital TV costs more.
I guess I will let her keep going with those old VHS tapes. But I better tell her to stock up on blanks before she can't find them anymore
correct moderation choices include informative and flamebait. this followup comment is offtopic. moderate accordingly. kthxbye.
"You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
DVD doesn't record HD.
Yes, it can. There's BD5, BD9, and AVCREC for Blu-Ray content on DVD media, 3x DVD and HD REC for HD DVD content on DVD media, and AVCHD which is media agnostic (BD-R, DVD-R, tape, whatever) but might not be played by Blu-Ray players.
D-VHS RECORDS HD (!)
If you were lucky enough to get an early model that didn't recognize Macrovision's HD version of copy protection. Also, I have yet to see a D-VHS deck that supported playback of S-VHS video at anything better than VHS quality. (Unfortunately S-VHS decks already are hard to find, and if you find one it's expensive.)
Consumer recording is pretty much over.
I still have my TiVos (three series of standalones), and if the source was broadcast or analog I can transfer to my desktop computer and burn to DVD (until someone forces cable companies to stop encrypting all digital non-broadcast channels) or on the one with a DVD burner built-in.
However, I did predict that VHS would be going away soon, especially with the impending digital switchover. Though there would have been an option to sell VHS decks without tuners (neither NTSC nor ATSC).
Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?