Re: throw the mp3's in the (recycle) bin
Posted: Wed May 05, 2010 9:33 pm
Good find, I was not expecting that many records... wow
worldwide dubstep community
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I hate everything that's not wav, aiff, or flac.NilsFG wrote:Thing is, most people that listen to digital music are listening to mp3's.yong wrote:The thing about cutting the highs and lows only applies to mp3. Bad ones at that.
But I care about his records.
Except audiophiles, dj's & producers, almost no one listens to WAV, AIFF or FLAC.
ahahah, true say.seckle wrote:when you're an old man or woman, are you planning on giving your kid's a hard drive as an heirloom? "here son, this is my 30 years of collecting music"
Mattron wrote:ahahah, true say.seckle wrote:when you're an old man or woman, are you planning on giving your kid's a hard drive as an heirloom? "here son, this is my 30 years of collecting music"
it'd probably have crashed long before that as well.
"here son... here are my 10 external HD's of mp3's I've collected over the years."yong wrote:Mattron wrote:ahahah, true say.seckle wrote:when you're an old man or woman, are you planning on giving your kid's a hard drive as an heirloom? "here son, this is my 30 years of collecting music"
it'd probably have crashed long before that as well.
which is why no data is safe unless you have it backed up in 3 places......
which is why i back up my data..........................
Yeah, why not?Mattron wrote:"here son... here are my 10 external HD's of mp3's I've collected over the years."yong wrote:Mattron wrote:ahahah, true say.seckle wrote:when you're an old man or woman, are you planning on giving your kid's a hard drive as an heirloom? "here son, this is my 30 years of collecting music"
it'd probably have crashed long before that as well.
which is why no data is safe unless you have it backed up in 3 places......
which is why i back up my data..........................
So go from HD to HD, it's not that hard.Alty wrote:And most HDDs only have a life expectancy of 10-15 years or so...
By the time you pass on your digital music collection to your descendents the physical format will probably have changed not just once but a few times. That's one of the problems with digital media storage - the technology advances so quickly and is so driven by money that storage tech becomes obsolete rapidly and the danger is not that the media becomes damaged, it's that compatible readers no longer get manufactured or readily obtainable and software changes to to the point where the data can't be accessed. The last 20 years have seen 5.25" floppies, 3.5" floppies, zip drives, cassette tapes, betamax, VHS, console cartridges and even CDs to some extent phased out. Old, low tech formats like books, microfilms and records survive and remain accessible for far longer and are more resilient against failure of civilization.Helix [Delay] wrote:So go from HD to HD, it's not that hard.Alty wrote:And most HDDs only have a life expectancy of 10-15 years or so...
None of these are "hard drives"kay wrote:5.25" floppies, 3.5" floppies, zip drives, cassette tapes, betamax, VHS, console cartridges and even CDsHelix [Delay] wrote:So go from HD to HD, it's not that hard.Alty wrote:And most HDDs only have a life expectancy of 10-15 years or so...
What's the difference?yong wrote:None of these are "hard drives"kay wrote:5.25" floppies, 3.5" floppies, zip drives, cassette tapes, betamax, VHS, console cartridges and even CDsHelix [Delay] wrote:So go from HD to HD, it's not that hard.Alty wrote:And most HDDs only have a life expectancy of 10-15 years or so...
I'll have a chance to transfer it without a doubt.hayze99 wrote:What's the difference?yong wrote:None of these are "hard drives"kay wrote:5.25" floppies, 3.5" floppies, zip drives, cassette tapes, betamax, VHS, console cartridges and even CDsHelix [Delay] wrote:So go from HD to HD, it's not that hard.Alty wrote:And most HDDs only have a life expectancy of 10-15 years or so...
In 20 years it's probably going to be just as hard to get your hands on a USB cable as a floppy disc drive. If it all goes wireless (which it will), and cables turn obsolete, your old harddrives are just as fucked.
great point kay.kay wrote: Old, low tech formats like books, microfilms and records survive and remain accessible for far longer and are more resilient against failure of civilization.
hahah...drlego wrote: "cmon kids, lets listen to Anti-War dub"
"ah no Dad, please dont skank you are so embarrassing"