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Technologies Your Kids May Never Know


In today's dizzying world of technological growth, a lot of hardware falls by the wayside, left to reside forever in as relics in dusty attics and landfills. To illustrate this fact, the folks at Wired have put together a list of technological ephemera that our children may never know about (and some non-techie stuff as well).

Highlights range from "inserting a VHS tape into a VCR to watch a movie or to record something" (we wonder if kids being born today will even know what handling a CD/DVD/Blu-ray disc is like), to the scream of a modem connecting (which isn't particularly upsetting, even if it does fill us with a bit of nostalgia).

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Audio/Video, TV

Idea for Netflix the Result of $40 VHS Late Fee


We've listened to Netflix founder and CEO Reed Hastings talk business about his company, but how's about a little background? After announcing a momentous Q4 while practically every other outfit on the planet hung their head in shame, the understandably elated exec sat down with Fortune to explain how Netflix came to be.

As the story goes, Reed lamented the $40 fee he was nailed with upon returning a VHS copy of 'Apollo 13' in 1997. Soon after, he began to research the idea of starting a rental-by-mail outfit. Interestingly enough, the subscription based model that nearly 10 million people enjoy today was something that came after the first concept, but obviously he hasn't tried to mess with the magical elixir very much since.

Have a look at the read link for the full writeup.

Audio/Video

Crafty Crooks Get a 'Cheap' Blu-ray Player


Can't wait for Black Friday? Neither could two suspects in Virginia Beach. Reportedly, a crafty duo entered a local Wal-Mart late last week, with one placing a Samsung Blu-ray player in her cart while the other placed a DVD / VCR combo unit in his cart. Once that was complete, the two met in the pet section, swapped the unwanted DVD / VCR unit out for a Blu-ray deck and proceeded to checkout. The cute couple paid for dog food and a rather inexpensive DVD / VCR player, yet arrived home with dog food and an improperly boxed Blu-ray player. Moral of the story? Blu-ray adoption would clearly soar if manufacturers would just price the players right. (We kid, we kid.) [From: WTKR.com via CDFreaks]

Audio/Video, Home Video

JVC Stops Making Standalone VCRs


We were fully prepared to start harshing on VHS as a dead-end technology that never went anywhere during its time in retail (as a joke, of course), and out of nowhere, a bona fide tear slowly ran down our left cheek. Today, friends, is a day worth remembering. Today truly marks the end of an era, and as far as we can tell, JVC really was the only company still producing standalone VCRs. Of course, the outfit will continue to serve customers with a need to play back VHS tapes by offering up DVD / VHS combo units, but those looking for a shiny new slice of retro in 2008 will be out of luck after remaining inventories dry up.

All told, over 900 million VCRs were produced worldwide, with 50 million of those boasting a JVC label. The iconic VCR has been around for over 30 years now -- here's hoping the videocassette lives on in your domicile in one form or another, even if it's just the resident dust collector. [Via Impress]

Rampant Fungus Destroying Old VHS Video Tapes


Oh, gross! This story sounds like it came from The Onion, but be afraid: The UK Guardian's Observer newspaper said it, and so it must be true. Turns out a devastating virus, or "Tape Mould" as the Brits are calling it, is ravaging VHS tapes from the '80s and '90s all over the United Kingdom. ('Girls Just Wanna Have Fun'! 'Desperately Seeking Susan'! 'Degrassi Jr. High'! -- all gone!)

More troublesome than the destruction of our fave '80s hits, which are mostly available on DVD anyway, is the mold's desecration of families' precious memories and historical footage. Families with infected tapes may sit down with their popcorn to watch a recording of little Stevie's bar mitzvah or the funny one where Fluffy falls in the bathtub, only to find them unwatchable.

Unusually high humidity has meant that the mold has already scourged thousands of miles of AV tape throughout the UK, not counting tons of tape that are probably rotting in storage. And it's spreading, says the Observer,"at an alarming rate."

If you have the mold, which looks like " a fine white dust," then quarantine the infected tape ASAP. Spores will spread like the bubonic plague, and one moldy tape can ruin your whole archive.

So far, the problem doesn't seem to be too epidemic here in the States, but in case you're worried, you should take a look at this bit of advice from the British Library Sound Archive, which advises that tapes should be kept in the dark, away from heat sources. Moisture is also an enemy of tapes and breeds mold, so keeping tapes in a dry place is advised. [Source: The Guardian]

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