One person’s analog trash is another person’s vintage treasure. If you have a pile of VHS tapes that haven’t been touched since the dawn of digital media, you might be able to make a fortune on them.
These days, most of us rely on streaming services to watch our favorite movies. But diehard fans often collect films on Blu-ray for posterity. Before Blu-rays, DVDs were all the rage and quite similar ...
You can probably start digitizing your collection for less than $100.
This is read by an automated voice. Please report any issues or inconsistencies here. One collector has amassed more than 4,000 VHS tapes organized into 20 carefully curated categories, re-creating ...
In the midst of a big clear-out of drawers and cupboards you rarely venture into, you'll probably find a little more than you bargained for. Perhaps you didn't realize just how many VHS tapes you ...
On the television screen, a woman named Adriana stands in the middle of a California desert, nothing behind her but sand and shrubs. Wearing a swimsuit and holding an automatic rifle, she aims the ...
You have probably seen the clickbait articles trying to draw you into news websites, tempting you with stories of old video cassettes supposedly worth hundreds or even thousands of dollars. The hype ...
The last VCR, according to Dave Rodriguez, 33, a digital-repository librarian at Florida State University in Tallahassee, Fla., was produced in 2016 by Funai Electric in Osaka, Japan. But the VHS tape ...
To the editor: Wow, talk about nostalgia! This article stimulated my brain protoplasm into memories of how I created my collection of more than 4,000 VHS video cassettes (“In a digital world, VHS ...