The sooner they’re digitalised the better. The main barrier to doing that these days is having access to a VCR (looking on eBay or asking friends or relatives might be your best bet here) but once you have one, you can buy a USB adapter, and they usually come with added software to make the conversion. Alternatively there may be services that will do it for you for a fee (depending what country/area you’re in)

Why is this important? Well, you might be able to preserve media that is of interest to other and would otherwise be permanently lost, but a more common scenario that sadly happens all too frequently is that you’ll wish to revisit a home video and find that the quality has degraded significantly, to the point it is difficult to watch.

The sooner you act the better. Please, if you have video that is important to you, act now before it is lost forever. I have in-laws who took the time and effort to transfer their film to VHS in the 90s, only to then leave it to degrade, not realising that this would be the case.

  • @_MoveSwiftlyM
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    31 year ago

    Could you please add a “Why YSK:”? It’s rule #2. Thank you. :)

    • @winstonOP
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      21 year ago

      Done! Thank you for the heads up :)

  • @CMahaff
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    21 year ago

    DVDs also suffer from this and start to degrade in about the same amount of time.

    My fiance is in her mid-20s and already home-made DVDs from her teen years are sometimes unreadable or have glitches.

    As you say - get them to digital ASAP

  • @Jesterkun
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    11 year ago

    It’s super dependent on how they were stored. I have 30 years old VHS tapes that are fine.

    Keep them out of sunlight, high humidity, and preferably in a climate controlled place (not your basement)