I own thousands of 78s. Unless someone here has a cylinder collection, I win.
I do, when I can. Storage space is cheap, and it’s not any more trouble.
It’s all about the cloud now. Anything I download from Amazon I can re-download from their cloud in perpetuity for free. I can also stream the music to my PC or nearly any other device. iTunes also has a cloud for songs you buy from them.
Your post came to mind last night when my husband was thinking aloud about how he needed to hook up the VCR to record a show*. He got mad at me for laughing at him.
- We just canceled our satellite service and are still going thru DVR withdrawal.
I have two VCRs and I record shows all the time. If anyone points and laughs at me, it is as little drops of water rolling off a duck’s back, and I still get to watch my shows. Cheaply, too.
In my lingerie drawer I have a couple of ancient cassette tapes, recordings of my little girl reading aloud from story books. Priceless (and I hope they hold up and we can find something to play them on again someday, lol.)
Actually the standard from Amazon 256kbps VBR.
I know some people who store music in loseless format, but that isn’t very practical for a portable mp3 player.
It’s only the first of many things 20 year olds will be laughing at you about. Comes with age.
We’ve got a really old player piano - we’ll win when we get some spindles of music for it and get it fixed up so it can play.
+1
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NOW you can. It’s a new idea and they’re waiting for folks to become accustomed. TV, radio and cable internet were all free at one time as well.
I miss the cover arts of CDs (hell, from what I can tell, most people don’t bother with cover art on their iTunes, settling for the grey musical note - I always make sure mine has cover art, since most of my collection are self-made collections of files rather than commercial collections, I create a cover art for it).
My dad, in the meantime has had recordings that he’s had to transfer from reel-to-reel tape, to 8-track, to LP, to cassette tape, to CD, to MP3. Seriously. And he still has several recordings in all of these formats.
Don’t fret, Ogre -
Freshness ain’t forever
[Last panel of the strip says it all…]
I’m 0 for 5 on hard drives. I’m done with magnetic discs after this computer dies. It’s all going to be on DVD’s, solid state drives or possibly cloud storage. Not sure I like the idea of cloud storage giving how much fun people have hacking into stuff.
Where “in perpetuity” means “as long as Amazon stays in business”[sup]1[/sup].
- which, I admit, is for the foreseeable future.
I prefer to buy albums on CD rather than digitally because most CDs still come with goodies like lyrics sheets or notes from the artists or bonus discs sometimes (Amon Amarth, in particular, likes to put full concert DVDs as a bonus disc on their albums), and because I don’t have an mp3 player dock in my car.
That being said, once I get it home I generally rip them to my computer right away and stash the disc in my closet forever unless I want to listen to it in the car.
Just rip your CDs to FLAC, WavPack or another lossless format and you’re all set.
External storage is pretty cheap
I have more than 2000 CDs and probably a greater number of LPs. I also have most of the CDs on one of my hard drives.
My partner, who is 20 years younger than I am, knows better than to laugh.
I found a bunch of old vinyl at a garage sale that a guy despised SO MUCH, he let me have his entire collection for five bucks. Along with an old N64!
Those records are now (mostly) Mp3 files on my itunes. Worth every penny I paid for the USB turntable. This guy had Deep Purple, Earth Wind and Fire, and old Polka albums in there…what an eclectic mix!
But yeah, I still love CDs, even though my cellphone and my iPod can be wired into pretty much every sound system I own. Those “Digital Booklets” aren’t the same as seeing beautiful artwork on the cover and having the tactile sensation of the album and the liner notes.
Back in my musicology days, I knew a few profs and indy musician peers that even bucked the CD trend with a new system: they press vinyl copies of their music, complete with liner notes and some nice art on the front, and inside is a code to go to a server that lets you download the digital copy of those tracks. You get to have these (in my opinion, quite aesthetically pleasing) mounds of records, yet you aren’t bogged down by analog technology if you don’t want to be!
Most people are still using VCRs. DVR penetration is only at 37%.