Dixon's to stop selling VCR's

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  • Andrew Pratt
    Ultra Senior Member
    • Aug 2000
    • 16478

    #1

    Dixon's to stop selling VCR's

    In a move that marks the beginning of the end for a hugely successful chapter in technology history, Britain's biggest high street electronics retailer Dixons has announced that it's taking VCRs off its shelves for good.

    "We're saying goodbye to one of the most important products in the history of consumer technology," Dixons marketing director John Mewett said. "We are now entering the digital age and the new DVD technology available represents a step-change in picture quality and convenience."

    "We're saying goodbye to one of the most important products in the history of consumer technology."
    --John Mewett, Dixons marketing directorAll over the world, the revolutionary VHS (video home system)--which let people record and watch television programs when they wanted rather than at the whim of broadcasters--is in headlong retreat as the DVD (digital versatile disc) takes over.

    Dixons, which had sold VCRs for 26 years, is not alone. Wal-Mart, the world's largest retailer, offers only a handful of stand-alone VHS recorders on its Web site.

    "VHS was pretty revolutionary," VHS player collector Andy Hain told Reuters on Monday. "The fact that people take them for granted so much today shows just how important they were."

    For more than 25 years, VHS dominated the world home entertainment market after seeing off a challenge from Sony's Betamax in the early 1980s.

    By the 1990s, a VHS recorder was a common feature in most homes as prices fell and technology improved--although the art of actually programming a recorder remained a mystery to many.

    To add insult to injury, police grudgingly admit that in Britain at least, home burglars don't even bother to take VHS players because new ones now cost so little that no one wants a second-hand model.

    When DVDs first came along in the mid-1990s, sales were initially slow, but now sales of DVD players outstrip those of VHS players by a factor of 40 to one globally. Leading high street film rental company Blockbuster reports that over 80 percent of its rentals are DVDs.

    Far from undermining the film industry, DVD sales can make the difference between loss and profit.

    Internationally, the market for DVDs--currently estimated at some $15 billion a year--is expanding exponentially. The industry expects that some 450 million households will have a DVD player by 2008.

    But the explosion of DVD technology has brought a surge in piracy--discs may offer better-quality viewing, but they're far more quickly copied than tapes (and they're easier to carry).

    The demise of VHS vindicates the foresight of Hain, who has been collecting VHS players for the past 11 years and has set up his own museum of video recorders.

    He admits on his Web site though, that the museum is rather small. "This is partly because VHS decks are a little dull," he reflects.

    Dan Ilett of ZDNet UK contributed to this report.

    Story Copyright © 2004 Reuters Limited. All rights reserved
    http://news.com.com/Rest+in+peace+VH...3-5462745.html
  • George Bellefontaine
    Moderator Emeritus
    • Jan 2001
    • 7636

    #2
    Unfortunately I still have a whack of vhs tapes with movies that haven't yet been released on dvd so I'm afraid I'll need a vcr for awhile yet. Still, I can count on one hand the number of tapes I have watched this year.
    My Homepage!

    Comment

    • Andrew Pratt
      Ultra Senior Member
      • Aug 2000
      • 16478

      #3
      ...I'm afraid I'll need a vcr for awhile yet
      Me too its my only clock in the media room

      Comment

      • Kevin P
        Ultra Senior Member
        • Aug 2000
        • 10812

        #4
        Originally posted by Andrew Pratt
        Me too its my only clock in the media room
        Me too. Plus I'll need it for the 1-2 shows a year I do tape (no point blowing money on a Tivo or DVD recorder for that). Also, usually when I tape stuff it's for someone else, or tapes made off the camcorder, so I'll probably have a VCR in my rig for a looong time...

        Comment

        • Uncle Clive
          Former Moderator
          • Jan 2002
          • 919

          #5
          George, me thinks we'd better buy us extra one's just for backup ole boy!
          CLIVE




          HEY!! Why buy movie tickets when you can own a Theater?

          Comment

          • H.Donald
            Senior Member
            • Aug 2004
            • 477

            #6
            I have two vcrs in my setup...for dubbing.Of course I have not dubbed any vhs in years.One of my vcrs feeds a dvd recorder.I have been slowly putting old camcorder tapes on disc.By the time I am finished the next big thing will be here and I will be dubbing from disc to that...hopefully.

            Comment

            • Glen B
              Super Senior Member
              • Jul 2004
              • 1106

              #7
              Of the five VCRs at my house, two are used every day to record and view favorite shows off cable. I don't need DVD quality to watch sitcoms, documentaries and home improvement shows.


              Comment

              • David Meek
                Ultra Senior Member
                • Aug 2000
                • 8934

                #8
                Long live Tivo! We didn't do much recording to VHS at all, but once we bought the Tivo that changed. We now record most everything we want to watch to it (with the exception of sports). That way we don't suffer through commercials. :a>
                .

                David - Trigger-happy HTGuide Admin

                Comment

                • Azeke
                  Super Senior Member
                  • Mar 2003
                  • 2123

                  #9
                  Originally posted by David Meek
                  Long live Tivo! We didn't do much recording to VHS at all, but once we bought the Tivo that changed. We now record most everything we want to watch to it (with the exception of sports). That way we don't suffer through commercials. :a>
                  I'm with you Dave, I bought Tivo as a birthday present for my wife ($99.00), it's like one of those technological innovations that once you own it you'll never go back. Great product, no tapes, and very intuitive menus,, different flavors. Try it you'll like it.

                  BTW, I still have 4 VCRs, but they hardly see any use except when the kids want to play an old tape.

                  Regards,

                  Azeke

                  Comment

                  • George Bellefontaine
                    Moderator Emeritus
                    • Jan 2001
                    • 7636

                    #10
                    Originally posted by Uncle Clive
                    George, me thinks we'd better buy us extra one's just for backup ole boy!
                    Hey, Clive, I have 4 vcrs throughout the house, plus a tv/vcr combo so I will be okay for some time to come.
                    My Homepage!

                    Comment

                    • phillipk
                      Member
                      • Aug 2004
                      • 38

                      #11
                      I don't know... for recording TV I believe VCRs are here for quite a number more years. Whether a retailer can be profitable--that's a tad different. (Though, I suppose if no one sells them it could become an issue.) Not everyone is as into TV stuff as you all (we-all).

                      A side issue that doesn't ever seem to be discussed is that magnetic tape is much more archival than DVD (metal). Even hard disks are a bit flaky. I'm not saying I'm against new technology, but tape has some real advantages still.

                      Comment

                      • Andrew Pratt
                        Ultra Senior Member
                        • Aug 2000
                        • 16478

                        #12
                        I must admit that we do use our VCR on occasion to tape CSI but if I had the funds i'd replace it with a Tivo like unit. Maybe next year I'll be able to swing that.

                        Comment

                        • Gordon Moore
                          Ultra Senior Member
                          • Feb 2002
                          • 3188

                          #13
                          Well I just purchased a cheapy DVD/VCR to replace our broken down VCR and supplement our primary DVD player (since it doesn't play mp'3 and WMA). I'd say it' not totally dead yet. Tape can take alot more abuse where kids and kiddie movies are concerned.

                          must admit that we do use our VCR on occasion to tape CSI
                          Since CSI runs same time as 'The Apprentice' I'm using my leadtek tv card to direct burn CSI to DVD. Works quite well and is one step away from a deidcated recorder.

                          Andrew for less than $80 bucks CDN you could add this versatile tuner card to your existing pc and get almost the same result, includes an IR and remote. considering where your pc is relative to the media room, you wouldn't even need a dedicated HTPC to make this happen. Add GB-PVR, learn the remote to the pronto, run an s-vid cable to the 1098 and away you go TIVO style :yesnod:
                          Sell crazy someplace else, we're all stocked up here.

                          Comment

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