Yes. The most simple method would require a PCI TV tuner card for the PC (or any card that can accept incoming video/audio signal from whatever VCR you're using), capturing it from the VHS to a computer, compressing it and then recording onto a DVD Video Disc.
Specialized hardware devices also exist that can perform this task.
No. It only works on a DVD/VHS player.
The easiest way to copy VHS tapes to DVD is to purchase a VHS/DVD combo. It will allow you to pop in a tape and burn it to DVD without having to download software or hook up to computer.
There have been a number of combined VHS and DVD players as well as several VHS and DVD recorders. The combination was a convenient one for playing both formats from a single unit or for transferring VHS to a more robust and future-proof format. The market for combined VHS and Bluray players is far smaller. The customers who are now buying Bluray players are generally the same people who invested in DVD technology some years ago and have moved away from VHS already. VHS is of course a standard definition format. Recording it onto a Bluray disc will not enhance the quality and it certainly won't turn the VHS content into HD. For these reasons, it makes little commercial sense for a manufacturer to produce a VHS and Bluray combination. While it is impossible to predict what each manufacturer might do in the future, it is safe to say that a combination player is very unlikely.
DVD is such an improvement over VHS that it doesn't matter.
yes it will come with a bluray,dvd,and digital copy
A Bluray disc stores five times more data than a DVD. Therefore, a DVD will not have the capacity to store the contents of a Bluray disc.
This is very unlikley, bluray is far ahead of VCR technology, consider converting your vhs tapes to dvd.
Try Amazon, Netflix or Hulu.
Yes. The DVD is available from a number of on line retailers.
Digital video cassettes will not play on a VHS player; VHS is analog and cannot play digital media.You may be able to find a service in your area that can copy from an older medium (like your ZR10 cassettes) to something like DVD or BluRay.
What you are seeking to do violates copyright laws.
All VHS films have been discontinued. You would either have to buy a used copy or buy it on DVD.
The difference would be about the same as the jump from VHS to DVD (if it's a miniDV camcorder) or from VHS to bluray (if it's a 720p or better digital camcorder.)