wired.com — As counterintuitive as it may seem in this age of iPods and digital downloads, vinyl—the favorite physical format of indie music collectors and audiophiles—is poised to re-enter the mainstream, or at least become a major tributary. Talk to almost anyone in the music business' vital indie and DJ scenes and you'll encounter a uniformly optimistic...
Oct 29, 2007 View in Crawl 4
mxmjOct 30, 2007
Tisk. You should have used it...
happyscrappyOct 30, 2007
It's easier to read a book on the toilet or on the plane than read an eBook.Also note it is easier to listen to a CD (esp. rippeD) on the toilet or on the plane than to take vinyl to either of these places.Thanks for helping out my argument.
drstephanheimerNov 5, 2007
@CLShortFuseRight because bluetooth + mp3 equals audio fidelity but then again if your listening to Linkin Park or some other s**tty emo band you probably don't want to hear it too clearly or you might realize it sucks
drstephanheimerNov 5, 2007
Your point being????
drstephanheimerNov 10, 2007
Did I insult your favorite flash in the pan band? Ii'm sure your listening to them right now singing about how much their life sucks and how much pain their in. You have no clue about audio fidelity, or how sound actually works and your just talking out of your ass like a troll. Not to mention that the noise floor in a car is so high anyway its impossible to have a decent listening experience.So please shut the f**k up.
doorzApr 27, 2008
Yeah, i remember buying The Gaucho on CD and being absolutley annoyed cause at the end of the title song there was a 19khz sine sound whistling away and destroying any belief i had that CD's were perfect. That was 1985. Inbetween there have been about 4 re-releases of this album on CD , and you know what: I all downloaded them lossless and burned to CD. I bought this album once, and in unsatisfactory quality, so i'm sure not going to buy it again. BTW anyone has a vinyl of 'the Gaucho' to spare?
doorzApr 27, 2008
Old Hat: Technics made that way back 1984. infrared sensor could 'see' the tracks and you can program the songs like a CD player. I own three of them, all work fine: Google SL-Q6, SL-Q15, etc.<a class="user" href="http://usr.audioasylum.com/images/3/34098/Technics_SLQ6A.jpg">http://usr.audioasylum.com/images/3/34098/Technics ...</a>