Posts Tagged vhs

Disney’s Inspector Gadget 2 (VHS, 2003), Mint Condition

Posted by on Monday, 30 August, 2010

Some recent gadget auctions on eBay:

Disney Cp-Z04-Gggsp-C 4Gb Usb Drive (Gadget Gary)
US $31.57
End Date: Friday Feb-10-2012 22:14:31 PST
Buy It Now for only: US $31.57
Buy it now | Add to watch list

2PCS Smallest Mini Solar Powered Robot Racing Car Moving Toy Gadget for Kids
US $0.99 (1 Bid)
End Date: Friday Feb-10-2012 22:14:54 PST
Bid now | Add to watch list

New Paris Symbol Tower Gadget Keyring Key Ring FREE
US $3.99
End Date: Friday Feb-10-2012 22:17:01 PST
Buy It Now for only: US $3.99
Buy it now | Add to watch list

Sizzix BIGZ Die Tim Holtz Alterations GADGET GEARS
US $14.75
End Date: Friday Feb-10-2012 22:18:13 PST
Buy It Now for only: US $14.75
Buy it now | Add to watch list

In The 80′s – Music Video

Posted by on Thursday, 22 July, 2010

mp3, Lyrics, Info: Get the mp3- rhettandlink.com 80s Tshirts- www.districtlines.com Song and video written and produced by Rhett&Link. LYRICS: You kids think – your gear is iconic But Im gon take you back to see some real electronics gimme a beige PC, green text, black screen and 64 kB of memory (thats plenty!) forget a phone that fits in your pocket I keep my phone in a bag in my car (thats how we rock it!) who needs a camcorder, that size of my hand?! you know I wanna look like a news cameraman! (I wanna perch it on my shoulder…like an overweight parrot!) my disks were floppy but my hair was stiff and all my stickers were scratch and sniff! In the 80s! If it was big it was good! 80s! My TV was wood! 80s! My car was shaped like box! 80s! Back when everything rocked! youre tellin me mp3s oh theyre so great Id rather push Rewind; and sit and wait! my first VCR cost me five grand VHS is best! (Im a Beta Man!) 16-button controllers really make me sick! gimme one red button and a joystick! In the 80s! the bigger the betta 80s! I had an antenna! 80s! my TV was thick 80s! we didnt point and click 80s! I had a big boom box 80s! I calculated with my watch 80s! My mix tapes were hot 80s! Back when everything rocked! Distributed by Tubemogul.


What AT&T’s Limited Data Plan Means for You

Posted by on Sunday, 6 June, 2010

What AT&T’s Limited Data Plan Means for You
Here’s an explainer on how AT&T’s limited data plans affect different types of customers. Find yourself in this mix.
Read more on Wired News

June 4, 1977: VHS Comes to America
A new home-video format debuts at the Consumer Electronics Show. Home recording of TV shows, and watching movies at home, is no longer restricted to the rich and techie.
Read more on Wired News

Storage Bug Hits HTC Evo 4G Phone Just Before Launch
Google generously hands out the HTC Evo 4G phone to all attendees at its developer conference. But some users now complain of a problem with the SD card that won’t store photos or files to the device.
Read more on Wired News


Record sales, down. Game sales, down. Video sales, down. VHS sales… up?

Posted by on Wednesday, 24 March, 2010

I assumed that VHS tapes had gone the route of Polaroid film and were continuing to be phased out of existence. I must have been too hasty, because according to the Entertainment Retailer’s Association, videocassette sales in Britain have more than doubled in the past year.

In the grand scheme of home entertainment, these numbers are hardly a drop in the bucket. Movies, PC games, and console titles are still moving millions of copies per title. VHS has jumped up 214%, except total sales still haven’t cracked 100K.

But who’s still making all of these tapes? At least with other retro media formats such as vinyl and instant film, there are distinct advantages over today’s mediums. MP3s don’t have anywhere near the same fidelity or warmth, and modern cameras still can’t instantly print analog prints. But I don’t see anything VHS tapes can do that DVDs can’t do exponentially better.

One interesting tidbit is that music sales aren’t as far down as you’d expect. 2009 only saw a 0.8% decline despite the loss of large chain stores such as Zavvi and Woolsworth. According to ERA director general Kim Bayley:

“It’s too early to say whether this is the music market bottoming out”

But some changes to the music delivery system may be responsible. The average price of an album has dropped below £8 for the first time, and smaller, independent retailers are surviving. Seems the US could take a leaf out of their book, perhaps?



Video on demand: The patron saint of Tribeca Film Festival?

Posted by on Thursday, 4 March, 2010

Is video on demand the key to making your spiffy indie movie the next Huge Success? Depends on who you ask. The Tribeca Film Festival will experiment with VOD this year, having signed deals with cable providers like Comcast, Verizon FIOS, and Cablevision (a New York-area provider, for those of you who’ve never heard of it before) to create a Tribeca VOD channel. The thing is, even though putting a film on VOD is a guaranteed way to increase its exposure, there seems to be a bit of a stigma attached there.

So the deal is that several of the movies that make their debut at the Tribeca Film Festival, which runs from April 21 to May 2, will be available on the festival’s VOD channel. You might think, “Hey, that’s cool! I can’t make it out there to see the films, so I’ll just hop on the VOD channel, sit back, and enjoy!” But not everyone thinks that way. The idea is, what do you think of movies that come out straight to DVD, or VHS back in the day? You think, “Well, this movie must stink.” Some people associated with Tribeca are afraid that, instead of being a necessarily “good thing,” putting these movies on VOD may tarnish their appeal. “Oh, that’s the movie from VOD? Yuck.”

That’s ludicrous, of course. If I were a filmmaker, and I’m certainly not, I’d only want one thing: for as many people as possible to see my creation, whether it’s on VOD, DVD, YouTube, or whatever. I make movies so people can see them.

The point is, no, there’s no reason to be afraid of VOD. The more people who see your movie, however that may be, the better.



JVC announces Blu-ray/DVD/VHS recorder with 250GB HDD

Posted by on Wednesday, 27 January, 2010

Here’s a new device that can help those who still sit on precious VHS cassettes that never made it onto discs. JVC announced [JP] the SR-HV250 for the Japanese market today, a Blu-ray/DVD recorder, VHS recorder and 250GB hard disc drive all rolled into one.

The device supports MPEG-2, MPEG-4 AVC/H.264 and AVREC. You also get a USB port, an SD/SDHC slot, LAN connectivity, an HDMI interface, and an S-Video. The device lets you record video on BD-R/RE and DVD-R/RE discs.

It’s not the first of this kind (at least in Japan), as Sharp, Panasonic and JVC itself have rolled out VHS-compatible Blu-ray recorders last year. But combining three recording formats has its price: Be ready to pay around $3,000 if the SR-HV250 should make its way outside Japan one day (JVC hasn’t made an official announcement yet). In Japan, the device went on sale today.