I still remember the good old LaserDisc days!!!
Theres very little I'd get again Blu though, the leap isn't nearly so much.
The best way around the trailers (if you don't want to see them, every once in a while there's a good one), is to go straight to the menu, pick "chapters", pick "chapter 2", then use the BACK button on your remote.
I have no intention of going to BluRay and paying DVD prices of 5-10 years ago for a few hundred lines of resolution myself. Mostly I watch films via my computer's DVD player which is hooked up via HDMI to my plasma and upscales nicely on its own; otherwise I'd probably move to downloads. Repurchasing stuff I have on DVD just isn't in the cards.
I don't have to worry about that. I've got several older model TVs in different rooms of the house as backups. By the time the last one goes, I'll be in the ground and won't be looking at anything anyway.I still love VHS. I use my VCR more than use my DVD player. I'm taping a cooking show off Food Network right now. With five fully functional VCRs in my house (including a brand new one still in its box) and hundreds of videotapes in my collection, VHS will still be with me for many years to come...
Ten years from now, the video signal your VCR's produce may not be compatible with new televisions.
Modern electronics uses a lot of digital circuitry, and the signal processing circuits they use are using smaller and smaller margins of error.
An older television may be happy to accept a video signal that is 5 nanoseconds out of phase with the clock signal, but a future television might reject that signal completely, and the VCR will appear to not work.
So when your buy a new television (however many years in the future), remember to make sure your VCR's work with it.![]()
I don't have to worry about that. I've got several older model TVs in different rooms of the house as backups. By the time the last one goes, I'll be in the ground and won't be looking at anything anyway.
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I don't have to worry about that. I've got several older model TVs in different rooms of the house as backups. By the time the last one goes, I'll be in the ground and won't be looking at anything anyway.
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In the UK at least you have a choice of a variety of boxes that will convert SCART or other analogue signal to HDMI - including the integration of audio - because televisions are already appearing on the market that lack analogue connectors.
Not just good for people with video players, but also enthusiasts of old video game consoles!
Many of those analogue->digital conversion devices create digital artifacts in the picture, similar to a lossy jpeg compression. The image quality can be worse than you would like.
Also, these converters may or may not have shrinking margins of error too. If they don't, their output signals may not be accepted by future televisions. If they do, they may not understand their input signal from the video player/game console. It's not infallible.
If you're happy watching VHS on old TVs I'd wager you really don't care much about image quality; the amount of people who use YouTube would also seem to indicate a high tolerance for subpar video quality.
I have a friend who still records TV shows on Beta. He prefers the picture quality over VHS and he has never gone for things like DVR or the like. He has DVD, of course, but for day-to-day recording and time-shifting, he uses tape still.
Theres very little I'd get again Blu though, the leap isn't nearly so much.
I have no intention of going to BluRay and paying DVD prices of 5-10 years ago for a few hundred lines of resolution myself.
I have no intention of going to BluRay and paying DVD prices of 5-10 years ago for a few hundred lines of resolution myself.
I have no intention of going to BluRay and paying DVD prices of 5-10 years ago for a few hundred lines of resolution myself.
The difference between Blu-Ray and DVD is pretty much the same as the difference between DVD and VHS before it. So you upgraded the last go-around for those same "few hundred lines" of resolution. BD also has the benefit of being backwards-compatible with the previous technology so you don't need to re-buy a collection just continue your current one on the new technology. Aside from a couple "must have" movies that's pretty much what I have done.
I have a friend who still records TV shows on Beta. He prefers the picture quality over VHS and he has never gone for things like DVR or the like. He has DVD, of course, but for day-to-day recording and time-shifting, he uses tape still.
So a couple weeks ago I went to his place to watch Doctor Who, which he'd recorded earlier in the day. I was expecting a bit of a visual train wreck - an HD-produced show, recorded off a digital cable station (not HD, though) and viewed on something like a 40-inch plasma. (Oh yeah, he has a plasma TV as well).
The big surprise? It looked just as good as a DVD recording. Beta might have lost the first great format wars but it seems to have become the format that works best in the long term. Couple this with one other factor - when was the last time you saw Beta blank tapes for sale anywhere? So he's recording on media that's more than a decade old, most likely. And it still looks great.
I was quite pleased. It also served to support my view that plasma is definitely the way to go for anyone who enjoys watching not just analog media like VHS or Beta, but any non-HD recordings or broadcasts.
Oh and as for the nostalgia question earlier - I have 30 boxes of VHS tapes I need to someday sort out, mostly consisting of off-air TV recordings, some dating back to 1982 (and yeah I know odds are many of them are now deteriorated) but also handicam recordings of my grandparents, my mum and dad - things I hope to be able to transfer to digital someday.
I am not nostalgic for the amount of space VHS tapes took up. If we didn't have DVD and I bought the complete Six Million Dollar Man series set Time Life put out last fall, I'd have needed to rent a second apartment just to hold all the tapes!
Alex
So you upgraded the last go-around for those same "few hundred lines" of resolution.
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