TECH Why you shouldn’t throw out those DVDs and Blu-Rays

Tristan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
One for all the disc hoarders out there.

I FULLY understand, and even embrace to a degree, the idea of converting your discs to digital files and keeping them on one hard drive. Same with books. Takes up a LOT less space that way. But there's still a place for physical media, and this is a lot of reason why.

...and I bet you never considered your stash of books and DVDs a prep item, did you? Popular Science does.

Fair use cited so on and so forth.


Why you shouldn’t throw out those DVDs and Blu-Rays​



You might think physical media is obsolete. It’s possible to watch basically anything on streaming sites at this point. Best Buy is ending DVD and Blu-ray sales and so is Target. Many people no longer have Blu-ray or DVD players plugged into their TVs, assuming they even watch things on a TV at all. It’s understandable, given all this, that you might be eyeing your shelf full of physical media and wonder whether it’s time to throw it all out.



That’s a mistake. There are all kinds of reasons you should keep your physical copies of TV shows and movies around.


Content disappears from streaming services


A few years ago Warner Bros. started removing its own shows from Max, called HBO Max at the time. Among these shows was Westworld, a prestige HBO series that subscribers understandably thought would stick around on the service. Until that point no major streaming service had removed its own content—Netflix, for example, removed plenty of shows made by other companies but never one of its own originals. Warner Bros. broke this unspoken compact with Westworld. Today the only place to watch the sci-fi drama online is on TubiTV, but you can’t watch episodes whenever you want—it’s basically an online TV station that plays all the episodes in order. Warner Bros. isn’t alone here: Disney pulled several of its own shows from Disney+ last year, including a brand new TV show based on the movie Willow.


Which is all to say that you can’t count on streaming services to offer all the shows you love in perpetuity. You know what you can count on? A physical disc. A TV show or movie you have on Blu-ray or DVD will keep working for you until the disc physically breaks down, and even longer if you back them up. If you want to make sure you can keep watching a TV show or movie you need to buy a physical copy.


No internet? No problem.


Streaming services, for the most part, only work if you have an internet connection. Physical media keeps working, as highlighted by a piece in The Guardian about a Florida power outage in 2018 that made one family’s DVD and Blu-ray collection extremely valuable:


Word got around. The family’s library of physical films and books became a kind of currency. Neighbors offered bottled water or jars of peanut butter for access. The 1989 Tom Hanks comedy The ’Burbs was an inexplicably valuable commodity, as were movies that could captivate restless and anxious children.


The internet goes down sometimes, for all kinds of reasons—natural disasters, yes, but also good old fashioned outages. Having some physical media around means you’ll still have something to watch.


It might be cheaper


Some people like to binge watch the same show, again and again. Peacock, for example, owes at least some of its existence to dedicated fans of The Office, who from what I can tell, just kind of always have the show on in the background. That might be worth it to you, but here’s the thing, though: I found the complete run of the series on Amazon on DVD for $50, a total that could pay for just over four months of an ad-free Peacock subscription. You could probably get the series for even less if you’re willing to look for a used copy, meaning there’s no excuse to pay for Peacock just for one show. Buy the discs and you can binge watch as many times as you want, all without any ongoing subscription fees.


You can lend them out


I love ebooks but tend to buy a physical copy of anything I truly love. Part of this is that I like seeing the books on my shelf, granted, but another big part of the appeal is that I can lend physical books out to friends. Physical copies of movies and TV shows work the same way: You can lend them to whoever you like, even as streaming services are going out of their way to stop you from sharing passwords.


Of course, it’s not just on you to lend out discs: your local library probably does too, giving you access to all kinds of shows for free. In some places this is going even further: Little DVD libraries are popping up as a way to share discs with your neighbors. If you can physically hold something there’s no restrictions on lending it out, and that’s a real kind of freedom that streaming services can’t—or, at least won’t—give you.


Special features



One last thing. DVDs and Blu-rays come with all kinds of special features, from behind-the-scenes footage to deleted scenes. Streaming services don’t offer these features—the best you can do is search for them on YouTube when you’re done watching. This only matters if you care about such things, granted, but it’s a big reason you’ll never get me to part with my special edition set of Lord of the Rings.


With the first reason being perhaps the most important.
 

antlers

Senior Member
I also have an "extensive" DVD collection---The internet will probably be unreliable or go down in the future. Don't forget to have a few EXTRA/portable DVD players ( check Thrift Stores for DVDs and spare equipment )-----pick up dupe copy's of DVDs and CDs to trade or lend.
 

packyderms_wife

Neither here nor there.
I also have an "extensive" DVD collection---The internet will probably be unreliable or go down in the future. Don't forget to have a few EXTRA/portable DVD players ( check Thrift Stores for DVDs and spare equipment )-----pick up dupe copy's of DVDs and CDs to trade or lend.

Best Buy has the Sony Blue Ray dvd player, that was recommended in my thread asking about dvd players, for $120.
 

Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
just imagine the suicide rate during the Covid Con if the Darkside decided to cut or begin censoring the internet and even the cable system >>> 24/7 of the Golden Girls re-runs ...

entertainment is a prep that doesn't get enough notice - many of the current forms will most certainly be a problem continuing after a SHTF ....

That WOULD get dull, but it'd take a while. Golden Girls ran seven seasons and it was pretty good stuff.
 

Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
Heck
I still got a bunch of video cassettes
Star Trek
Star Trek voyager
Next generation
And a vhs player

Got to get yourself Deep Space Nine and Enterprise. DS9 was the best Trek series yet. And Enterprise had its moments.

The newer stuff is a bit hit-or-miss and can trend woke in different degrees. I still say Lower Decks is the funniest Trek's ever been, and Picard did okay. Strange New Worlds is also holding up well, but Discovery can't leave too soon.
 

kyrsyan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I keep ours. For most of those reasons. And another... we have a data cap. Somewhat common with internet in rural areas. Before I upgraded for business, continually streaming meant we risked having to pay extra fees for internet.
 

kyrsyan

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Does anyone recommend a program to copy dvd's to a harddrive? And copy youtube videos to harddrive???

WAB
I would love to know as well. I had a good one that I loved. And the whole program is now gone. I have one functional copy on a very old computer. I used it to make copies of my son's favorite movies so he would stop destroying the DVDs.

As far as youtube, I think some folks on here have a good program or two to suggest, but the one I was using now glitches.
 

LoupGarou

Ancient Fuzzball
I would love to know as well. I had a good one that I loved. And the whole program is now gone. I have one functional copy on a very old computer. I used it to make copies of my son's favorite movies so he would stop destroying the DVDs.

As far as youtube, I think some folks on here have a good program or two to suggest, but the one I was using now glitches.
Firefox Add-on for most video streams:
 

Barry Natchitoches

Has No Life - Lives on TB
I have kept all my CDs and DVDs.

But I did rip the good songs off my CDs, and installed them on my iPod.

Yes, I said iPod.

Then, I carry that little unit around on my fuel belt when I run. It is tiny, weighs almost nothing, power lasts about 20 hours before it needs a charge, and then, charges very quick when it finally does need a charge.

carrying my iPod as a separate unit frees my iPhone to do other things.

But I always figured, if the manure ever hits the oscellating unit, power will be at a premium. As little power as my iPod takes - especially if I use wired ear pieces instead of bluetooth - I can quickly. Recharge the little unit with a small solar powered charger that I got years ago when those small phone chargers were first coming out. That charger is too small for most of today’s applications, but does really well with my 2012 iPod unit.

That allows me to have great music and FM radio reception ongoing through the crisis, without using limited power resources that are needed for more demanding, more mission critical resources.
 

Blacknarwhal

Let's Go Brandon!
I have kept all my CDs and DVDs.

But I did rip the good songs off my CDs, and installed them on my iPod.

Yes, I said iPod.

Then, I carry that little unit around on my fuel belt when I run. It is tiny, weighs almost nothing, power lasts about 20 hours before it needs a charge, and then, charges very quick when it finally does need a charge.

carrying my iPod as a separate unit frees my iPhone to do other things.

But I always figured, if the manure ever hits the oscellating unit, power will be at a premium. As little power as my iPod takes - especially if I use wired ear pieces instead of bluetooth - I can quickly. Recharge the little unit with a small solar powered charger that I got years ago when those small phone chargers were first coming out. That charger is too small for most of today’s applications, but does really well with my 2012 iPod unit.

That allows me to have great music and FM radio reception ongoing through the crisis, without using limited power resources that are needed for more demanding, more mission critical resources.

I'm using a Samsung Galaxy S6 for that same purpose. Considering another one just for audiobooks.
 
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