When I worked in TV / video production I don’t think I ever heard the term “VCR” used. Unless someone was referring to what they used at home to record stuff on VHS tapes.
The playback/record decks we used for work we called VTRs, or more commonly just “decks” (e.g. a Beta deck; a DigiBeta deck; a DVC-Pro deck; a three-quarter deck; etc…). But never VCR.
Ahhh, the fun of jargon!
Which plays cassettes in the Video Home System format, as opposed to Beta (the other competing format - and both are well and truly defunct anyway).
They were known as “Video players” or “Video recorders” (even though they could all record) when I was growing up in New Zealand - I don’t remember anyone calling them a “VCR”.
[Buggles, Radio Killed the Video Star.]
Put the blame on VTR.
[/Buggles, Radio Killed the Video Star.]
(Not VCR as too many people mis-hear it.)
Yet Another Quibble: Betamax wasn’t the format. Beta was. Only Sony’s were Betamaxes. Other manufacturers put out Beta machines, such as Sanyo (“Betacords”).
As to the OP: Chill, dude. If you want to get upset about old terminology, how about those old commercials saying something was available “… on video and VHS.” Where “video” meant “DVD”. Umm, you’re selling a video. On both formats.
In related news, my neighbors (an elderly couple) house got broken into about a month ago and they left the flatscreen because it was anchored into the wall, but they stole an old gateway desktop with Win95 and a VCR. Desperate ass theives lol.
I don’t remember that. I do remember “out now on video and DVD”, which doesn’t make a lot more sense but sort of did in the days when people referred to a VHS tape as “a video”.
While reading this thread, out of sheer curiosity I searched Amazon for “vhs tapes” and found a number of brands for sale. I’m talking about blank recordable tapes, not prerecorded movies.
They have both “new” and “used” listed. So now I’m wondering if the new are simply remaining unopened stock or is someone still manufacturing these things?
They’re still made new and there’s a reasonable market for them, mainly because there’s a lot of perfectly functional VHS machines out there which people use for taping stuff off telly when they’re out and watching later.
Yep, I still know a lot of people who do their time-shifting on VHS “players.” Looks like Maxell and TDK still makes them.
Kind of reminds me of how I could get new 8" floppy discs from Memorex as late as 1994. Even as use of a format goes down, as manufacturers drop out, the remaining manufacturers can maintain profitable sales since they get a bigger percentage of that smaller market. Instead of competing with 20 other brands for a 5% share of a million users, now they can get 50% of 20,000 users.
The term for unopened old stuff is “New old stock” or NOS.
E.g., one can get 40+ year old vacuum tubes that have never been used. Those are NOS. And they wouldn’t be marketed as used.
I wouldn’t touch used VHS blanks tapes with a ten foot pole. Even 20 year old NOS tapes might be a really bad idea, given the uncertainty of how they were stored. Tapes really don’t last long unless stored right.
As a tad lapsed Beta-phile, I still have a supply of unopened Beta tapes. But all I’m doing now is converting old tapes to digital. No new recording in 4-5 years. When I used to sell Betas on eBay I’d throw one in with each sale. Don’t think I have enough left to be worth putting on eBay.
I have a combination DVD player / VCR that I bought way back when DVDs were the newest thing. Every once in a rare while there will be two things that I want to see that are on at the same time and at a time when I can’t watch either of them. My TIVO will only record one thing at a time, so I grab one of the old VHS tapes I have lying around, plug a cable box into the VCR and record the second show that way. Of course that’s been happening a lot less often since so much stuff is now available with my cable provider’s On Demand service.
One advantage of tapes is the portability. You can tape something and then physically lend it to someone. I’m sure with the right hardware you could do this with solid state devices like thumb drives.