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Like Gibbsey, I am a believer in the silver disc. However I see it as the licence to play music rather than the necessity of having it rotating. My strategy starting about 18months ago was to copy all of the CDs onto a dedicated USB hard drive in a lossless format. ..the technique is called ripping and is extremely simple. I used a Sony program called Music Centre ,and used the FLAC format. The Program will allow one to sort any artist, gendre, album etc and gives on a computer screen the artwork . In retrospect I might have been better to have used the ordinary CDA standard, as more devices are compatible with it or MP3 s than with Flac. ..but With the work done I am not repeating it.
This means i have a single small drive with an entire wall of CDs all stored in perfect resolution..well as perfect as the CD can be. The disc can be plugged into a TV,into an auxiliary port on a satellite box etc and the entire library is available. Should I wish ,I can replicate the entire library over a few hours onto other hard drives. Most of the time the disc is plugged into a laptop and the output directed to a better DAC than the inboard one in a laptop. ,
What this means really is that the multidisc CD player is obsolete. I am also a hoarder of older equipment,and have still working AVRecievers and stereo systems from 1980 ,1990, 2000, and 2010... So I do expect equipment to last. But sometimes the technology has just moved on. The added value of having all the music available by storing it digitally is so strong,that you should consider it. |
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