The Hidden Hardware Tax: Why Your “Simple” Movie Night Costs Thousands

March 12, 2026

 

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The Hidden Hardware Tax: Why Your “Simple” Movie Night Costs Thousands (and Fails Fast)

Remember when watching a movie at home meant plugging in a cheap DVD player and turning on the TV?

That setup could last 10 years or more without updates, subscriptions, or account logins.

Fast-forward to 2026, and the cost of “just watching something” has quietly turned into a multi-thousand-dollar hardware commitment — while the devices themselves are increasingly designed to age out long before they physically fail.

The convenience revolution has a hidden price tag.


The $4,000 Movie Night

Start with the modern “basic” setup.

A reasonable smartphone today — one with decent storage, a usable camera, and 5G — typically lands somewhere around $500–$800 for mid-tier models. Flagships easily cross $1,000.

A laptop capable of browsing and streaming comfortably? Expect $500–$1,000 for entry-level machines, with mid-range systems landing between $1,200–$1,700.

Then there’s the TV. Even budget televisions now default to 4K smart displays, with a typical 55–65″ set costing $500–$1,000 from brands like Hisense, TCL, or Kogan.

Add it all together and the typical household spends somewhere between $1,500 and $4,000 assembling the hardware used to access modern streaming entertainment.

All just to access content that used to run on a $60 DVD player.


The Mass-Production Paradox

Technology was supposed to get cheaper over time.

Manufacturing has never been more automated. Semiconductor fabrication has advanced dramatically. Global supply chains operate at enormous scale.

So why aren't devices dramatically cheaper?

Instead, prices remain stubbornly high — partly because the industry now packs devices with features nobody asked for:

AI processing units

ultra-high-resolution displays

voice assistants everywhere

always-connected cloud services

These features inflate base prices while doing little to improve the simple experience of watching a movie.

Meanwhile, rising demand from AI data centres is also pushing up the cost of memory and components, placing additional pressure on consumer device prices.


Built to Age Out

The bigger issue isn’t the price — it’s how quickly the hardware becomes obsolete.

Modern smartphones often remain physically functional for years, yet their practical lifespan averages roughly 3–4 years before battery degradation, performance slowdowns, or loss of software support pushes users toward replacement.

Many users replace their phones even sooner — typically every 2–3 years.

Laptops follow a similar trajectory. While the hardware may last longer, glued batteries, soldered memory, and sealed components make repairs difficult and expensive. Many systems become sluggish or unsupported after 3–5 years.

Televisions should last far longer — and often the display panels do.

But the smart software inside them doesn’t.

Streaming apps stop updating. Operating systems lag. Services quietly drop support.

Ironically, the “smart” part of the TV often becomes obsolete before the screen itself.


The 4K Illusion

Modern TVs are aggressively marketed around 4K resolution.

But in Australia, free-to-air broadcasts still mostly operate in HD (1080i or 1080p). The widely discussed 4K broadcast future never really materialised.

That means the biggest benefits of 4K typically appear only on paid streaming tiers, where services like Netflix or Disney+ charge extra for Ultra-HD plans.

Consumers pay more for hardware that exceeds most broadcast content — while streaming platforms monetise the difference.


The Upgrade Cycle

All of this feeds a predictable loop.

  1. 1. Buy expensive hardware to access streaming platforms
  2. 2. Pay monthly subscription fees across multiple services
  3. 3. Watch devices lose support or performance within a few years
  4. 4. Replace the hardware
  5. 5. Repeat

What began as a promise of convenience has quietly evolved into a permanent upgrade economy.

Households now juggle multiple streaming services, often spending around $41 per month on average, while broader digital entertainment subscriptions average $78 per month across nearly four services.

Meanwhile the hardware required to access them continues to grow more complex — and more disposable.


The Ownership Problem

Physical media had its flaws, but one thing was simple:

If you bought a DVD, you owned the movie.

Streaming changed that relationship. Access replaced ownership.

Movies and shows can disappear overnight when licensing deals change. Entire libraries vanish without warning.

Consumers pay continuously — but never actually own the content.


The E-Waste Elephant in the Room

There’s also an environmental cost hiding beneath the upgrade cycle.

Globally, electronic waste has grown to over 60 million tonnes annually, making it the fastest-growing waste stream in the world.

Only about one quarter of that waste is formally recycled.

Much of it comes from devices that still function — but are no longer supported or economically repairable.

Perfectly usable hardware ends up in landfill simply because the software moved on.


A Simpler Alternative?

For light users, the economics are starting to look strange.

Instead of maintaining thousands of dollars in fragile home hardware, some people are drifting toward minimal setups — a cheap laptop or tablet connected to a mobile hotspot.

A $30–$40 mobile data plan can suddenly look more appealing than maintaining a full entertainment ecosystem of smart devices, subscriptions, updates, and inevitable replacements.


Why “Dumb TVs” Disappeared

There’s one more detail that explains a lot about modern hardware.

A decade ago you could easily buy a “dumb TV” — a screen with no operating system, no tracking, no apps, and no software updates.

Today they’re almost impossible to find.

Because smart TVs aren’t just televisions anymore — they’re data platforms.

Many modern TVs collect viewing behaviour, app usage, and device information to power advertising systems and recommendation engines. Some manufacturers also earn ongoing revenue from ads displayed directly in the TV interface.

In other words, the television you already paid for can still generate income long after it leaves the store.

From a business perspective, this explains why manufacturers aggressively push smart features and connected ecosystems. A simple display that lasts ten years and never connects to the internet doesn’t generate additional revenue.

But a connected device that needs updates, services, and eventual replacement?

That fits perfectly into the modern tech economy.


The Real Question

The system isn’t broken.

It’s working exactly as designed.

Modern entertainment hardware is no longer a long-term purchase — it’s part of an ongoing revenue cycle built around upgrades, subscriptions, and software lock-in.

Which raises a simple question:

At what point does “convenience” stop being convenient — and start looking like a very expensive con?


Pricing & Data Notes

Prices mentioned in this article reflect typical Australian retail ranges observed between 2025–2026. Actual costs vary depending on brand, specifications, promotions, and retailer discounts.

Average figures referenced throughout the article are based on publicly available consumer research and industry reports covering device lifespans, subscription services, and consumer technology pricing.

Where averages are cited (such as internet or streaming costs), they represent national consumer surveys rather than individual household spending.


References

  1. 1. Canstar Blue — What Is The Average Internet Bill Per Month? (Feb 2026). Average Australian NBN bill around $85/month.
  2. 2. The Guardian — Australians pay $84 a month for their internet (Apr 2025).
  3. 3. NBN Co — nbn wholesale price changes from 1 July 2025 (May 2025).
  4. 4. WhistleOut Australia and provider pricing examples (e.g., Amaysim prepaid 5G plans).
  5. 5. Everyday Mobile from Woolworths — $30 prepaid 30-day plan.
  6. 6. Deloitte Australia — Digital Media Trends: Paying More, Scrolling Less (Nov 2025).
  7. 7. Canstar — Cost of Streaming Services in Australia (2026).
  8. 8. Australian Communications and Media Authority (ACMA) — Australia’s TV Prominence Framework (Jan 2026).
  9. 9. Freeview Australia — DVB-I broadcast testing announcements (Dec 2025).



Was VHS Video Really That Bad?

May 30, 2022

 

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Was VHS Video Really That Bad?

VHS video was terrible, right? Awful snowy, washed-out picture quality, distorted rolling images. Yeah... sadly, a lot of TV VHS recordings do look awful. But then, every once in a while, you come across a tape that was recorded from a solid source—or captured on one of those rare clear days of analog TV reception—and wow... it can look almost as good as a first-generation DVD. I said almost!

In this video, I take a trip down memory lane, reliving the VHS collection of my youth. Our collection includes a mix of tapes dating back to the mid-to-late 1980s, most of which were recorded from local television broadcasts. And let me tell you, the real time capsule isn’t just the shows—it’s the commercials! Some are hilariously bad, while others bring back a wave of nostalgia.

If you’re like me, you probably think that old VHS videos look pretty bad. Well… check this out! I recently revisited a 20-year-old PAL VHS tape, and if it weren’t for a slight horizontal wave in the image, I wouldn’t have guessed it was that old. There’s a bit of tracking misalignment, causing scan lines to start and finish slightly unevenly. Whether that’s from the recording or the playback, I’m not sure—but it’s incredible how well it has held up.

Now, I should point out that this is the exception and not the rule. I’ve been looking at a bunch of VHS tapes, and this was by far the best one. Some movies, especially those that weren’t played often, still look surprisingly good. However, tapes that were played repeatedly tend to degrade in quality.

I’ve got some other examples, including pay-TV recordings that look similar to the good-quality tape. However, free-to-air TV recordings from back in the day are a different story—many of them are extremely snowy, with lots of lateral and vertical movement. Not all, but a significant number of them. It’s easy to see why VHS has such a poor reputation. Looking back, my memories of VHS were mostly bad, but now that I’ve rewatched some of these tapes, I’m honestly stunned. When blown up on a larger monitor and viewed from a typical seating distance, a well-preserved VHS tape can look just like any other 4:3 image.

Here’s another example: one of the original Star Wars films. The tape has been sitting around for decades without much use, and yet it still plays remarkably well. It’s incredible to think that these tapes—over 20 years old—have survived this well. In fact, when comparing them to some early DVD transfers from the mid-to-late 90s, the VHS quality is sometimes better! Those early DVDs often had low bit rates, 4:3 aspect ratio cropping, and poor compression, making them look worse than expected.

Of course, not all VHS tapes aged gracefully. Some are filled with snow and distortion, making them nearly unwatchable—like trying to watch TV in a blizzard. The decline of VHS coincided with the rise of digital recording in the early 2000s, making analog formats obsolete almost overnight. However, the transition to digital wasn’t smooth for everyone. Early digital TV had low bit rates, terrible reception, and frequent signal dropouts, leading to blocky, corrupted video streams. In contrast, while analog VHS recordings had their flaws, they were at least watchable from start to finish without major disruptions.

So, was VHS really that bad? Well, it depends. The worst VHS recordings look horrendous, but the best ones can still be surprisingly watchable.

What are your memories of VHS? Did you have any tapes that looked shockingly good? Or was it all just static and tracking lines? Let me know in the comments!


CREDITS

Buy VHS Video Player

Convert VHS to Digital / DVD

Camera: Motorola Motog9 Plus

Music:

The Sleeping Prophet - Jesse Gallagher

Movie Clips

Back To The Future (VHS vs DVD)

Starwars (VHS)

National Rodeo Championships (VHS recorded from Satellite TV) & Many more.