The CD will soon disappear

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  • Steve Savicki
    • Jan 2004
    • 3937

    The CD will soon disappear

    So I heard a DJ on this country station saying CDs will be gone soon just like cassettes and vinyl. They will be replaced with the Ipod.
    I sure hope that doesn't happen. I love my little setup. I love the tape player that comes with it. I love how everything doesn't have to be computerized.
    Newer isn't necessarily better. In fact, there is old-fashioned technology I actually miss. I miss my 5 band graphic equalizer that came with old radios back when CD players were sold separately and were attached to analog tape players.
    sigpic
  • Ally_Kat
    ROTH ARMY SUPREME
    • Jan 2004
    • 7612

    #2
    They won't go completely away. Vinyl records are still made and sold. Cassettes are still made and sold.

    But personally, I want an ipod so bad.
    Roth Army Militia

    Comment

    • loss of fools
      Head Fluffer
      • Oct 2004
      • 349

      #3
      i cant see anything like that happening for a long long time.

      Comment

      • academic punk
        Full Member Status

        • Dec 2004
        • 4437

        #4
        I think too many people have made too much investment in their stereos and CDs for the CD to vanish anytime soon.

        But the ipod IS an amazing piece of technology, very convenient, so yeah, the CD will one day go the way of the 8-track.

        Comment

        • FORD
          ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

          • Jan 2004
          • 58789

          #5
          IPod is a good replacement for the Walkman. It's NOT a good replacement for a real stereo and a record/CD collection.

          An IPod is based on a hard drive, and hard drives occasionally die. Oops, there goes your entire music collection. Besides, paying for Mp3's is insane anyway.
          Eat Us And Smile

          Cenk For America 2024!!

          Justice Democrats


          "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

          Comment

          • nosuchluck
            Sniper
            • Aug 2004
            • 943

            #6
            nah. the iPOD will replace the walkman; CDs are where the mp3s will come from.

            Comment

            • Steve Savicki
              • Jan 2004
              • 3937

              #7
              Originally posted by FORD
              An IPod is based on a hard drive, and hard drives occasionally die. Oops, there goes your entire music collection.
              Yes, but will the next generation know that based on the Ipod craze these days?
              sigpic

              Comment

              • Ally_Kat
                ROTH ARMY SUPREME
                • Jan 2004
                • 7612

                #8
                Originally posted by Steve Savicki
                Yes, but will the next generation know that based on the Ipod craze these days?
                Know what? That harddrives crash? Probably.

                I don't know exactly how itunes works, but I know my friends keeps a compy of songs she has on her ipod on her computer. But, I'm pretty sure most of thsoe songs didn't come from itunes because she had them beforehand.
                Roth Army Militia

                Comment

                • fe_lung
                  Sniper
                  • Mar 2004
                  • 834

                  #9
                  I think that the next decade or so will bring the end of the cd, which I think really sucks for two reasons.

                  Reason 1. (I'm going to crib a bit from an Entertainment Weekly article from a couple of weeks ago here, but it's a sentiment I've felt for a long time anyway). iTunes has created a new way of listening to music - not only by giving users the ability to download certain songs, but also by allowing (in fact, encouraging) listeners to create random mixes of their song library.

                  On the first point, one can argue that this simply gives the consumer the opportunity to avoid the filler that exists on most albums. This is certainly true. Pop music in particular is rampant with cd's that contain only 20 - 30% quality music. Ok, fine, but I'm not sure that this is the cure to "singleitis" in the record industry.

                  The second point is, to me, more troublesome. Excepting greatest hits and singles packages, a lot of thought is put into the track listing on an album. Albums are (in the hands of thoughtful artists) crafted much like a film, play, or novel - they have ebbs and flows, highs and lows, tempo changes, etc.

                  By encouraging listeners to shuffle their song librarys it removes songs from their natural context. Instead of, say Eruption going right into You Really Got Me, you instead get Eruption flowing right into Baby Got Back. Want more? Both the CD and I-tunes count Intruder as a separate track form Pretty Woman... Therefore they won't ever shuffle together (ok, I suppose some mathematician might calculate the odds of them shuffling back to back but they'd be pretty long odds). Same with Little Guitars and its Intro.

                  Think of your favorite albums. Wouldn't you be thrown off by a different track listing. At first you might think it's just because you're used to hearing it one way, but I would lay odds that you wouldn't think of the album or it's component songs in the same way with this new track listing.


                  Reason 2: I will mourn the death of CD's just like I mourned the loss of albums for a simple reason: packaging. I love CD packaging. I love booklets, lyrics, photos. It creates a feel for the entire album. From the stark photos in The Joshua Tree to the vignettes inside VHII. It creates a headspace that brings you into the album.

                  I saw a Cribs a few weeks ago with the guy from Godsmack. In it he talked about how one picture from the inside of Aerosmith Live Bootleg made him want to be a rock star. I can totally understand that. How many of you haven't done that? Who here hasn't looked at the pictures inside Diver Down, or Appetite For Destruction, or the first Jane's Addiction album not just once or twice, but nearly every damn time you played the album!

                  When I get a new disk I read every word on it. I read the copyright info, the lyrics, the thank yous, the endorsements, everything. Do you care who played the pedal steal on "One"? I do. It's stupid, but it gives me a richer understanding of the music. From Moby's essays to DLR's drawings to U2's photos, it all adds to the texture of the album.

                  This, for me, is the major failing of iTunes. It's the same music it's just that it feels somehow less legitimate when it's missing it's original packaging.

                  Of course, that's just my opinion. I could be wrong.

                  Comment

                  • GAR
                    Banned
                    • Jan 2004
                    • 10871

                    #10
                    It wont be an iPod to replace the CD because computers use a CD drivetray, and can play on a DVD player.

                    Smartcards might succeed the CD though, because they can include a start-sequence before playing, so you could encrypt them from being copied as easily as one can rip a CD.

                    I like my chocolate milk.

                    Comment

                    • Nickdfresh
                      SUPER MODERATOR

                      • Oct 2004
                      • 49205

                      #11
                      I think this new DVD format will replace CD's 'cause CD's sound like shit! So do the MP3, ACC, & Bit Torrent files.
                      Blu-ray, also known as Blu-ray Disc (BD), is the name of a new optical disc format that offers more than five times the storage capacity of traditional DVDs. The format was developed to enable recording, rewriting and playback of high-definition video (HD).

                      i-pod's can't play movies too, can they?

                      Comment

                      • FORD
                        ROTH ARMY MODERATOR

                        • Jan 2004
                        • 58789

                        #12
                        Originally posted by Nickdfresh
                        I think this new DVD format will replace CD's 'cause CD's sound like shit! So do the MP3, ACC, & Bit Torrent files.
                        Blu-ray, also known as Blu-ray Disc (BD), is the name of a new optical disc format that offers more than five times the storage capacity of traditional DVDs. The format was developed to enable recording, rewriting and playback of high-definition video (HD).

                        i-pod's can't play movies too, can they?
                        No, but the price on portable DVD players has dropped like a rock.
                        Eat Us And Smile

                        Cenk For America 2024!!

                        Justice Democrats


                        "If the American people had ever known the truth about what we (the BCE) have done to this nation, we would be chased down in the streets and lynched." - Poppy Bush, 1992

                        Comment

                        • Coyote
                          ROTH ARMY SUPREME
                          • Jan 2004
                          • 8185

                          #13
                          I don't know 'bout y'all, but I'll be listening to my vinyls/CDs years from today.

                          And just for the hell of it, I ain't gettin' no god damn iPod.
                          Why settle for something you have, if it's not as good as something you're out to get?

                          Originally posted by Seshmeister
                          It's like putting up a YouTube of Bach and playing Chopstix on your Bontempi...

                          Comment

                          • Panamark
                            DIAMOND STATUS
                            • Jan 2004
                            • 17160

                            #14
                            Originally posted by fe_lung
                            I think that the next decade or so will bring the end of the cd, which I think really sucks for two reasons.

                            Reason 1. (I'm going to crib a bit from an Entertainment Weekly article from a couple of weeks ago here, but it's a sentiment I've felt for a long time anyway). iTunes has created a new way of listening to music - not only by giving users the ability to download certain songs, but also by allowing (in fact, encouraging) listeners to create random mixes of their song library.

                            On the first point, one can argue that this simply gives the consumer the opportunity to avoid the filler that exists on most albums. This is certainly true. Pop music in particular is rampant with cd's that contain only 20 - 30% quality music. Ok, fine, but I'm not sure that this is the cure to "singleitis" in the record industry.

                            The second point is, to me, more troublesome. Excepting greatest hits and singles packages, a lot of thought is put into the track listing on an album. Albums are (in the hands of thoughtful artists) crafted much like a film, play, or novel - they have ebbs and flows, highs and lows, tempo changes, etc.

                            By encouraging listeners to shuffle their song librarys it removes songs from their natural context. Instead of, say Eruption going right into You Really Got Me, you instead get Eruption flowing right into Baby Got Back. Want more? Both the CD and I-tunes count Intruder as a separate track form Pretty Woman... Therefore they won't ever shuffle together (ok, I suppose some mathematician might calculate the odds of them shuffling back to back but they'd be pretty long odds). Same with Little Guitars and its Intro.

                            Think of your favorite albums. Wouldn't you be thrown off by a different track listing. At first you might think it's just because you're used to hearing it one way, but I would lay odds that you wouldn't think of the album or it's component songs in the same way with this new track listing.


                            Reason 2: I will mourn the death of CD's just like I mourned the loss of albums for a simple reason: packaging. I love CD packaging. I love booklets, lyrics, photos. It creates a feel for the entire album. From the stark photos in The Joshua Tree to the vignettes inside VHII. It creates a headspace that brings you into the album.

                            I saw a Cribs a few weeks ago with the guy from Godsmack. In it he talked about how one picture from the inside of Aerosmith Live Bootleg made him want to be a rock star. I can totally understand that. How many of you haven't done that? Who here hasn't looked at the pictures inside Diver Down, or Appetite For Destruction, or the first Jane's Addiction album not just once or twice, but nearly every damn time you played the album!

                            When I get a new disk I read every word on it. I read the copyright info, the lyrics, the thank yous, the endorsements, everything. Do you care who played the pedal steal on "One"? I do. It's stupid, but it gives me a richer understanding of the music. From Moby's essays to DLR's drawings to U2's photos, it all adds to the texture of the album.

                            This, for me, is the major failing of iTunes. It's the same music it's just that it feels somehow less legitimate when it's missing it's original packaging.

                            Of course, that's just my opinion. I could be wrong.
                            Great Post !
                            BABY PANA 2 IS Coming !! All across the land, let the love and beer flow !
                            Love ya Mary Frances!

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