We've all been hoarding DVDs since the day they became more popular than the prior VHS. Now that we have more DVDs than we probably should, what's next. More importantly, are we going to have drives that read DVDs in 10, 20, or 30 years? Contributing Editor for PCMag, Lincoln Spector, writes his thoughts on the issue.

When a medium has enjoyed wide consumer popularity for a significant amount of time, the market for players stays alive for decades. You can no longer assume that every home has a floppy drive, phonograph, or cassette player, but you'll have no trouble buying these devices--all brand new. In fact, you can buy them with USB ports, which you couldn't do when these types of media were popular.
Of course, if a medium was popular only briefly, never enjoyed wide popularity, or was entirely controlled by one company, finding a player decades later becomes more of a challenge. To my knowledge, no one is making Laserdisc players or Bernoulli Box drives. You can still buy used ones, but eventually these will disappear.
Contributing Editor Lincoln Spector writes about technology and cinema."
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