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US Court Rules Google a Monopoly in 'Biggest Antitrust Case of the 21st Century'.
(www.commondreams.org)
This is a most excellent place for technology news and articles.
You don't need to bring your library. Having your library split between multiple platforms isn't a big deal and most people do it. You just don't give them any more money.
People didn't not buy DVDs because they had a library of VHSs.
Uh yes many of us did not buy dvds because we had vhs and couldn't afford to switch to a new medium.
Just like if we had a dvd collection we didn't go to HDDVD / Blueray. Many people never got into Blu-ray at all
But eventually we had to and now we have issues with drm and losing purchased digital media on streaming services
I'm not talking about replacing your VHS collection but buying DVDs in addition. You would still watch both. Maybe buying a DVD player was a barrier. But it wasn't that you owned VHS.
Yes it was for many many people. You seem to find this hard to believe.
Blueray/HDDvd was out before the majority of people stopped using their vhs collections.
As tvs went digital and high def it took a long time for people to care enough to upgrade/replace
Ok then switch to streaming. My point was just that just because you have a VHS collection doesn't mean you can't get media in another way and still use your VHS collection. And most people would use both while they transitioned. Throwing out all your VHSs for the hot new thing isn't something a lot of people did. Or throwing out all your DVDs because streaming is a thing. People aren't restricted to one thing.
Do you have a citation on this? Personally I was DVD only until I got an Xbox One, which could play Blurays.
And we got DVDs because my brother marketed getting a PS2 to my family as a DVD player and a Video Game system, as one of those alone cost the same as a PS2 at the time.
And we gave up VHS tapes long before, as space is at a premium for us. Worse quality, worse features, more work to rewatch something, bigger format, etc.