VHS tapes were a popular way to store home videos and movies for many years. Now, with technology advancing, many people want to keep these memories safe in a more durable and easy-to-access format.
Time stops for no one, and for no technology. There was a time when you probably preserved family memories by saving them to videotape, but videotape is now completely obsolete. If you’re like a lot ...
If National VCR Day has you wondering what to do with your old VHS tapes, look no further. Since the popularity of DVDs — and especially now, in the age of streaming — VCRs aren’t the primary way for ...
If your most cherished family memories are stored away on old VHS tapes, you need to act now. As time passes, videotapes lose their magnetic signal. The sharpness, quality and color deteriorate. Worst ...
The Super Mario Bros. movie released in 1993 has enjoyed cult classic status for years, persisting through certain online portals through which new viewers can re-experience what was largely an ...
Our VCR sits like a red-headed stepchild next to our desktop DVR box and DVD player. It's been more than a year since we switched the red, yellow and white wires feeding into the TV to the FiOS box.
If you were born in the 1980s or 1990s, it's likely that your childhood was filled with warm memories of Friday or Saturday night visits to your local video store to pick up VHS tapes for movie night.
VHS tapes ruled supreme from their invention in 1976 until the DVD takeover in the late 1990s. Back in the day, your media library was all about those sacred VHS tapes that you'd collect, requiring ...
One mom took her 10-year-old son to an antique store, where she explained how VHS tapes worked. TODAY’s Sheinelle Jones ...