Say goodbye to the standalone VCR

Tue Oct 28, 2008 10:05AM EDT

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You can still find DVD/VHS combo decks at your local big-box retailer, but the era of the standalone videocassette recorder is drawing to a close.

TradingMarkets.com (via Engadget HD) reports that JVC, the last major manufacturer that was still churning out VCRs for world markets, has finally halted production. While some smaller, no-name manufacturers are probably still cranking out VCRs on the cheap (and plenty of big-name DVD/VHS decks are on sale), the days of finding a standalone VCR at Best Buy are long gone. Indeed, only about 280,000 VCRs were shipped in Japan last year, compared to more than 6 million in 2000, according to TradingMarkets.

Not a shock, I know, but still ... it's the end of an era, especially considering that the VHS-playing VCR pretty much ruled the home video market from the mid-1980s to the late 90s.

Looking back, it was an era of relative video format peace—one that we'll probably never see again. Sure, there was the Beta-VHS war (pretty much over by 1985 or so), and there were also a couple of disc-based video format in the 80s and early 90s—namely CEDs (which you might remember under the RCA SelectaVision brand) and LaserDiscs—but for the most part, the tape-based VHS format (which itself kicked the bucket in 2006) was it.

I'm pretty sure my parents bought our first VCR (VHS, not Beta) back in 1982 or '83, and for a TV-obsessed kid like me, it was a game-changer. Renting movies was still a novelty (you had to go up to the counter and ask the clerk which movies were in, and they flipped through index cards to check—I kid you not), and we scheduled "Late Night with David Letterman" to tape each night (12:30 am was way past my bedtime). It wasn't until, oh, 1996 or so when I finally went the optical way, courtesy of a Pioneer LaserDisc player, and I finally bought a DVD deck (an $800 LaserDisc/DVD combo player, mind you) in 1998.

Anyway ... I can't say I miss VCRs and VHS, but they were huge in their day, and I'll never forget 'em.

So, anyone here still have a VCR in the house?

Related:
Standalone VCR party finally ends, JVC shuts the door as it leaves [Engadget HD]

Comments on Say goodbye to the standalone VCR

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  • 1 Posted by coachclymer on Thu Sep 3, 2009 3:27PM EDT Report Abuse

    Is there a way to change all our vcr tapes to dvd's?

  • 2 Posted by wmmboyd on Thu Sep 3, 2009 10:49PM EDT Report Abuse

    I was obsessed with the VHS recorder. Now 25 years later, I have well over 2000 tapes of recored everything. From state funerals to award shows to superbowls to in the news tragedys and anything in between you can think of. Now what am I suppose to do with all these tapes? So many memories. I wish I could bury them at sea. And I guess life goes on. 10 tapes alone (6hr format) of the OJ trial, and at least the same as the 911 day when I turned on the tv and saw a building on fire,I flipped a tape in the machine so fast, I didn't even realize that it was the World Trade Center, and then the second plane hit as I was rolling. I yelled out and couldn't believe what I was watching. So much history and movies archived. Anybody have any suggestions?

  • 3 Posted by pfiedler21 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 8:08PM EDT Report Abuse

    i had a VHS player until 2 years ago, then i bought a VHS and DVD combo

  • 4 Posted by speranza82 on Thu Sep 3, 2009 9:35PM EDT Report Abuse

    I bought a DVD/VCR combo a couple years ago, but I still watch my favorite movie on tape...the princess bride...great to pop it in and pick up where i left off...

  • 5 Posted by nenneteemma on Thu Sep 3, 2009 7:35PM EDT Report Abuse

    as technology evove,what we have now as the new toys like ipods,lcd televisions,will dissapear until you get a screen tv in which you will talk with anybody in the world,that technology exist but not for the common joe smith.however we will get there very soon.you can see the new phones in which you can get all.....mabe we will not be able to distinguish between clones and human beings...time will tell

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