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35 votes
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How video content is prepared and shipped to inflight entertainment systems
6 votes -
Goodbye, floppies - San Francisco pays Hitachi $212 million to remove 5.25-inch disks from its light rail service
30 votes -
We spoke with the last person standing in the floppy disk business
29 votes -
Tapedeck.org is a digital archive that features hundreds of cassette tape designs
13 votes -
Jpeg XL
36 votes -
DVDs are dying right as streaming has made them appealing again
20 votes -
Obsolete, but not gone: The people who won't give up floppy disks
23 votes -
Anyone have recommendations for a CD player I can charge via USB and play via BT (or USB) in my car?
A recent post here made me realize how much I really wish I just could pop in a CD while driving (you can skip those, and I can make mix CDs, so no need for cassettes haha). I commute a decent...
A recent post here made me realize how much I really wish I just could pop in a CD while driving (you can skip those, and I can make mix CDs, so no need for cassettes haha). I commute a decent amount and I'm using a Pixel with GrapheneOS. Adding a streaming service would just be one more piece of Google I'd have to add to my "work" profile. I'm listening to some great podcasts, but I'd rather go full nostalgia without ripping all my CDs.
That being said, I'd like any recommendations. USB would be nice for the constant power option, but blutooth is doable as well. TIA!
9 votes -
Best Buy is discontinuing physical media in Q1 2024
36 votes -
Why the floppy disk just won't die
61 votes -
Can anyone tell what's wrong with my tape deck?
8 votes -
The VHS-Decode project is an effort to improve the archiving of old analog video tapes
4 votes -
We bought HD movies on cassette tape and they're amazing!
7 votes -
Floppinux - An embedded Linux on a single floppy
7 votes -
The inside story of how the lowly PDF played the longest game in tech
15 votes -
Cassette history/trivia: A series of fortunate events
4 votes -
Time for next-gen codecs to dethrone JPEG [Comparison with newer image formats by co-creator of JPEG XL]
12 votes -
HD laserdisc: HD in 1993
3 votes -
Film: The reason some of the past was in HD
9 votes -
Is high-fidelity audio a genuine product or unnecessary overkill?
Note: if this topic is better served in ~music than ~tech feel free to move it! If I wanted to buy Linkin Park's A Thousand Suns, I have the following options: From Amazon 256 kbps VBR MP3...
Note: if this topic is better served in ~music than ~tech feel free to move it!
If I wanted to buy Linkin Park's A Thousand Suns, I have the following options:
From Amazon
- 256 kbps VBR MP3 ($11.49)
From 7digital
- 320 kbps MP3 + 256 kbps MP3 ($12.99) (I'm assuming it's 320 CBR/256 VBR)
- 16-bit/44.1kHz FLAC ($16.49)
From HDTracks
- 24-bit/48kHz FLAC ($19.98)
From Qobuz, which appears to be a different mastering of the album:
- "CD Quality" FLAC ($14.49)
- 24-bit/48kHz FLAC ($16.49)
- 24-bit/48kHz FLAC ($10.99 with subscription to their $250/year service)
Does paying more for the higher fidelity actually matter? I suspect that this is just a form of price discrimination preying on my want to have an "objectively" better product, because I'm assuming there's a ceiling for audio quality that I can actually notice and the lowest encoding available here probably hits that. I also don't have any special listening hardware.
I understand the value of FLAC as a lossless archival encoding (I used to rip all my CDs to FLAC for this purpose, and I've been downloading my Bandcamp purchases in FLAC all the same), but for albums I can't get through that service it appears that the format has a high premium put on it. Bandcamp lets me pay the same price no matter the format, but every other store seems to stratify out their offerings based on encoding alone. A Thousand Suns costs nearly double on HDTracks what it does on Amazon's MP3 store, for example, despite the fact that I'm getting the exact same music, just compressed in a different way.
As such, is paying more for FLAC unnecessary? Is high-fidelity FLAC in particular (the 24-bit/48kHz options) snake oil?
Furthermore, Qobuz seems to offer a different mastering of the album, which seems like it actually could be significant, but it's hard to know. Is this (and the various other "remasters" out there) a valid thing, or is it just a way to try to get me to pay more unnecessarily?
(Note: I'm using this specific album simply because it was a good example I could find with lots of different stratified options -- I'm not interested in the particulars of this album specifically but more in the general idea of audio compression across all music).
21 votes -
The smallest Discman ever made - was smaller than a CD
8 votes -
Film: The reason some of the past was in HD
13 votes -
The enduring allure of retro tech
9 votes -
US Air Force finally retires 8-inch floppies from missile launch control system
14 votes -
Remember backing up to diskettes? I’m sorry. I do, too.
11 votes