MUSEUM OF THE FALLEN
Dominance is not eternal.

A VHS videocassette

edusand, CC BY 2.0, via Wikimedia Commons · CC BY 2.0

Lost Technology

The VCR

videocassette recorder · VHS · Betamax
1976 CE 2016 CE

It put the broadcast schedule in the viewer's hands — freezing primetime on a plastic spool you could rewind, fast-forward, and tape over.

Born
1976 CE
Died
2016 CE
Lived
40 years
Dead for
10 yrs
At its peak
Funai alone sold ~15 million VCRs a year at peak
Cause of death
Replaced
Replaced by
DVD, then the DVR, then streaming
The Obituary

The VCR did something television had never allowed: it gave the schedule to the viewer. With a videocassette recorder you could tape a show and watch it later, fast-forward the adverts, build a library of films, and — at the video-rental store — bring the cinema home. From the mid-1970s it reshaped how the world watched, spawning Blockbuster, the “format war” between VHS and Betamax, and a Supreme Court case (Sony v. Universal, 1984) that legalized home recording as fair use.

It was overtaken in stages: the DVD offered sharper pictures and no rewinding, the DVR recorded to a hard drive, and streaming made physical media pointless. By 2016 only one company in the world, Funai Electric of Japan, still made VCRs — and in July it stopped, citing vanished demand and a shortage of parts. The machine that taught us to control time on television was finally out of time itself, leaving behind a generation’s worth of tapes slowly demagnetizing in attics.

Worth remembering

  • Sony's technically superior Betamax lost to VHS partly because early Beta tapes couldn't hold a whole movie, while VHS managed two hours.
  • The eternally blinking '12:00' — millions of households never learned to set the clock — became a running joke about technology outpacing its users.

The people

  • Shizuo Takano — Led VHS development at JVC, 1923–1992

    Co-led the team whose VHS format won the home-video war against Sony's Betamax.

  • Nobutoshi Kihara — Sony engineer behind Betamax, 1926–2011

    Sony's 'wizard' engineer, whose technically strong Betamax nonetheless lost the format war.

Gallery

Further reading

Sources

  1. Home VCRs from 1975–77 (Betamax/VHS); Funai, the last manufacturer, stopped production July 2016 CNN Money
  2. Sony v. Universal (1984) ruled home time-shift taping is fair use Wikipedia

A graveyard tradition: leave a stone to show you came, and remembered.

Buried nearby