you can go to any electrical shop
Video tape cassette, audio tape cassette, DAT tapes, etc.
You can use Audacity to record a cassette to a CD. This is a free download. You can use a computer and a dvd to to cd converter which includes converting cassette tapes too.
dvd's, cd's, cassette's, videotapes,and films
VHS cassette systems can be played on a player that has both DVD and VHS systems. The VHS player plays only VHS. The Player will not allow a DVD to be loaded into a VHS system. Summarizing, A DVD\VHS video player has two units which operate independent of each other.
I've done just this same thing in my 1996 Plymouth Grand Voyager SE..... If you have a cassette player you can simply buy a "Cassette Adapter". This looks like a cassette tape with a headphone sized wire coming out of it. All you need to do is put the tape in cassette player and hook plug into DVD players' headphone jack then presto audio comes through vehicle's speakers (this should work for all cassette players and devices that make sound eg DVD players or CD players). If it helps further I did product search at Target.com with keywords of " Cassette Audio Adapter" they are very inexpensive.
NO. DVDs have a better,newer technology incorporated. The quality of the DVD movies is higher than the cassette's and the sound can be on more channels, 6 usually, while at a cassette sound is on 2 channels maximum.
VCR=Video Cassette Recorder and a PS3 has a blu-ray DVD drive therefore, no.
Turn the tape over.
Dragon Ball Z is still on TV but you mostly will find it on DVD and cassette.
Cassette decks are almost outdated. The only real thing they are good for now a days is if you have a portable dvd player and you want to hear the sound through your car speakers.
DVD's are the digital equivalent of the old video tapes. DVD's are more robust than tape, don't wear out, and take up much less space in your collection than a video cassette would.
They don't. Polar bears don't even know what a DVD or DVD player is, much less know how to turn one off.