• @RealFknNito
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    81 year ago

    The current generation doesn’t even know what a VHS is. I’m sorry, time comes for us all.

    • @Couldbealeotard
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      1 year ago

      My nieces once asked to see my rectangular DVDs…

      • @[email protected]
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        61 year ago

        In their defense when I was a kid I called red dead redemption, GTA cowboys. If kids dont know what to call something theyll figure out an equivalent.

    • @FangedWyvern42
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      21 year ago

      I do. I’ve never seen or touched one, but I know what it is.

      • El Barto
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        21 year ago

        Buy one second hand and fiddle with it. Curious machines!

        • @[email protected]
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          01 year ago

          Out-dated and worthless you mean?

          There is no need to understand the technology.

          Not that tape storage is dead, it is just not relevant anymore.

          • El Barto
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            31 year ago

            Who’s saying anything about being relevant. There is no need to smoke cigars or make oil paintings either. Yet people do things that they find interesting regardless of what you think. Interesting, huh?

      • @RealFknNito
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        01 year ago

        You know what a cassette is. I don’t need to call it a cassette tape do I?

        • @[email protected]
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          1 year ago

          When they were widely used, people called cassette tapes “tapes” (common) or “cassettes” (less common). I don’t recall anyone calling a VHS videotape or VCR “a VHS”.

          Similarly, I have seen people recently say “a vinyl”, which wasn’t ever the way it was said. (it would be music “on vinyl” or “a record”).

          • @RealFknNito
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            21 year ago

            The only time I have ever in my thirty years of life heard someone refer to a VHS as a “videotape” or “tape” is in the context of “tape that show for me”. It’s always been “Video” or if they’re specifying the format “grab the videotape” or “VHS” a lot like how people today say “DVD”.

            I think we’d both agree someone who calls a “DVD” a “DVD Disc” insane and someone who just says “Disc” could mean CD-ROM, Blueray, so forth. It’s too general and I think the same thing applies to “tape”.

            • @[email protected]
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              11 year ago

              Yeah, “video” was common, but “VHS” wasn’t. Maybe kids who developed language as the format was expiring in the early-mid 90s didn’t have lots of examples and just thought the letters printed on the tape were a noun.

              • @Couldbealeotard
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                11 year ago

                It was when both VHS and Betamax was on the market.