Hello all:
Last week, my 11-year-old VCR conked out. I guess I'm way behind the times, but I was surprised to find that stand-alone VCRs are not made anymore. I hooked up a VCR/DVD recorder combo that I had had for several years but never used. It's OK, but the DVD recorder is temperamental at best and will only accept a few older types of DVD RWs, which seem to be hard to find. I certainly never had that problem with videotapes. I guess I'll use it until the VCR part fails, but then I'm not sure what I will do.
Sometimes technology advancements that make previous technology obsolete just puzzle me. What's wrong with keeping something that works?
Anyone else still use VCRs?
Last week, my 11-year-old VCR conked out. I guess I'm way behind the times, but I was surprised to find that stand-alone VCRs are not made anymore. I hooked up a VCR/DVD recorder combo that I had had for several years but never used. It's OK, but the DVD recorder is temperamental at best and will only accept a few older types of DVD RWs, which seem to be hard to find. I certainly never had that problem with videotapes. I guess I'll use it until the VCR part fails, but then I'm not sure what I will do.
Sometimes technology advancements that make previous technology obsolete just puzzle me. What's wrong with keeping something that works?
Anyone else still use VCRs?