| Really? I did. - Tapes would get chewed by the player - Took an age to find the right recording (you’d spend an age constantly rewinding) - Tapes would degrade the more you used them - sometimes they wouldn’t even sync vertically with your TV. Requiring all sorts of fun and games tuning your hardware - audio was often muffled and sounded like it was played through a sock - if you shared a household there was always the risk that someone would tape over your favourite recording - and even just getting the same content recorded was a game of chance. If the TV network was early or late airing your show or movie, there was a good chance you’ll end up missing some of it (back then there wasn’t an EPG so you had to programmed the VCR to start at a specific time rather than the start of a specific show). Not to mention my younger brother kept jamming Lego into the VCR (but at least that’s not the fault of the technology). I hated VHS. Switched to DVD the moment I could. Even though my computer wasn’t powerful enough to playback DVD properly I still massively preferred it. |
I was talking about video quality, not that other stuff.
> - if you shared a household there was always the risk that someone would tape over your favourite recording
This is actually significantly worse now, since most households lack the ability to "tape" anything.