Im torn. On one hand yes everything is available digitally. On the other I like having hard copies and not thinking about backing up 3 hard drives and random hard drive failure and managing an even larger library on a computer…its nice just to have the media exist. And what happens when our ability to own media disappears (which looks to be a very real possibility).

They do take up space. I may keep the ones I really like and get rid of others.

I easily have over 300. Along with dvds, but im keeping those.

  • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    VHS is low resolution and degrades over time, no reason to keep it unless you have tapes of things that don’t exist on better formats.

    • kkj@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      10 days ago

      Yeah, a backup that gradually destroys itself on such a short timescale isn’t much of a backup.

  • Krudler@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    Before you do that, I would like to point out I donated the entire TNG collection, and later found out it could have been sold for over a thousand.

  • empireOfLove2@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 days ago

    Of course not. The bigger problem is that VHS, like most magnetic analog media, decays. Most of those tapes have likely lost a ton of fidelity compared to when they were new and they’ll only get worse.
    I wouldn’t scrap them but I’d also consider archiving tapes without current digital copies to DVD’s or video files.

    • AceFuzzLord@lemmy.zip
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      10 days ago

      This is the way.

      If I had VHS tapes, it’s what I would do. I even know a single place in my city that could do it, but they would probably reject the job for copyrighted stuff, sadly but understandably.

  • palordrolap@fedia.io
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    10 days ago

    When I got rid of mine, I made a list of all the media I still wanted a copy of and then, over time, found second-hand or new old stock DVD versions online. That was ten years ago and I’ve still not broken the cling wrap on some of the replacements I bought. Just goes to show how much I really needed them!

    That said, my collection was far less than 100, so your collection might be an expensive endeavour to replace.

    Tapes with crud recorded from TV and computers went to landfill. All the commercial ones went in a consignment I had a charity organisation collect along with a lot of other things I was clearing out at the same time. In 2025, I’m not sure charities will accept them any more.

    I did manage to digitise some of the stuff from the TV / computer ones with an old VCR and a TV card in the computer, but that must be coming up on 20 years ago now. That’s all on a DVD around here somewhere. In one of those multi-disc wallets. Remember those?

    They can still be had online if you feel like paring down the space your DVDs take up. People used to use them for burned DVDs, of course, but there’s nothing stopping you from putting legit DVDs in one. Make a separate binder for the DVD covers if you really want to, and send the cases to landfill or recycling.

    If you want to go really nuts, do the same with Blu-rays.

    I do regret getting rid of a few things during that clear-out, but maybe only one tape had some sentimental value. And yet, if I’d kept it, I’m think I’d be equally disturbed that I didn’t get rid of it with the rest of them.

  • FUCKING_CUNO@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 days ago

    When was the last time you watched one? For whatever reason tape media is making a comeback, so you could probably get a decent price for them if you wanted. Maybe just keep the rare ones and pirate the rest? I donno. I personally just dont see the reason to keep them with free digital access to movies being so readily available.

  • Libb@piefed.social
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    10 days ago

    Allow me to share a personal experience with digital.

    I’m well into my 50s and for many years I have been an avid books collector (much into rare editions). In the early 00s, I started reading… ebooks almost exclusively. Because I wanted to make my life much simpler and less focused on materialism. So, save very few books I truly wanted to keep with me I donated my personal library to a charity. And started reading (and purchasing) ebooks.

    FF some twenty years later, approx in 2023. I have been reading ebooks almost exclusively.

    I kinda like my various Kindles readers, and my iPads too. I’m not ‘happy’ to own a digital library (I have always loved the book object) but it’s so practical there is no discussing it. My entire library used to fill almost all rooms in our home, it can now fit in the palm of my hand. Great. But then, one day I suddenly realize I don’t really own the ebooks I purchase on Amazon (Amazon can and is legally allowed to delete them from our devices). WTF? Another day, I realize my ebooks can be remotely updated. So far, I had no issue with books being edited in order to remove typos and stuff like that but that day I realized a book could also be remotely edited to change its content, say to remove a word that would now be considered offensive… Without me having any legal ability to prevent that. So, in order to protect my property, I learn about removing drm. But then I realize all I’m reading habits are also being monitored and tracked by ‘my’ devices and send back to Amazon or Apple for marketing and data analysis. WTF?

    I looked at my digital library and realized it never was mine. Most of those ebooks I had purchased for years on big retail platforms like Amazon and Apple they never were mine. I was merely renting a right to read them (that’s not always like that with ebooks purchased on some smaller/independent and DRM-free platforms but the bulk of my purchases were made on Amazon, and then on Apple). Looking at ‘my’ devices and knowing they were spying on me, I decided this was not the world I wanted to live in. It is something I discuss in more details on my blog, but simply put: upon realizing that I decided to quit reading ebooks almost entirely and move back to print (even for magazines and newspapers). Books I can fully own (no one can remotely delete or edit them from my bookshelves) and that don’t spy on me.

    And, at last getting back to your point, I did the same with with movies, series and music. I cancelled all my streaming subscriptions, all of them, dusted my old DVDs and CDS, and started purchasing new (or used) discs again to complete it. I’m not a collector anymore, as I strictly limit the size of my personal library, but I have not looked back and do not miss streaming or digital access.

    Physical medias are great as they give us full ownership (we can even resell or gave them away), they don’t track us, don’t spy on us, can’t be remotely edited or deleted. They don’t require Internet access, nor a monthly subscription.

    If you have room to store your tapes somewhere, why not keep them? If you don’t, well then it’s a question of deciding what is more important to keep in that limited space and tapes can very easily not be that important ;)

    edit: clarifications.

  • rouxdoo@lemmy.world
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    10 days ago

    My response is likely to be unpopular but it’s how I feel. I had ungodly gobs of physical media years ago - VHS, DVDs, BlueRay, CDs, etc. It got to where it was more of a hassle to dig through and find the item then slub it over to the equipment just to enjoy my media.

    I digitized everything and stuck it on a home media server. Now it’s as simple as grabbing the remote and pick what I want and it’s done. I’m much happier now.

      • Blastboom Strice@mander.xyz
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        10 days ago

        Oh thats cool:)

        If I had to send these from greece I think it’d be very expensive (I think they accept stuff from two points in the world, somewhere in the usa and somewhere in uk, both outside eu which makes it very expensive).

  • thisbenzingring@lemmy.sdf.org
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    10 days ago

    No. If they are meaningful to you, keep them. If you’re worried about the data failure of them, just watch them once every 10 years and it should renew the magnetic stuff on them.

    I work in a place with a lot of old technology and the general consensus is that magnetic media needs to go through the motions every 10 years to stay healthy.

    but we have had success accessing 25+ year old media. so there’s no scientific line about how long that stuff should survive.

    I do subscribe to the 10 year access rule because not all media was created equal.

    • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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      10 days ago

      just watch them once every 10 years and it should renew the magnetic stuff on them.

      VHS doesn’t work like that. It’s not digital. It doesn’t rewrite on a read. Magnetic hard drives and tapes don’t rewrite on a read either.

      You need to copy them to renew and VHS is analog so every copy is worse.