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The Rise and Fall of the CD (Original Post) Neoma Feb 2012 OP
I kind of see this as a good thing. jeepnstein Feb 2012 #1
Now to the next step guitar man Feb 2012 #2
Love the graph! funkhowser1 Oct 2012 #3
/this Lizzie Poppet Dec 2012 #6
000 ascrodin Nov 2012 #4
musicians juliazoe4 Nov 2012 #5

jeepnstein

(2,631 posts)
1. I kind of see this as a good thing.
Mon Feb 27, 2012, 09:47 AM
Feb 2012

I'm really liking the concept of downloading as a distribution model. It cuts out tons of money tied up in production and distribution. This "should" mean more money for the artist but we all know the music business is a cruel and shallow trench.

guitar man

(15,996 posts)
2. Now to the next step
Tue Feb 28, 2012, 03:25 AM
Feb 2012

To come up with a downloadable format that downloads as fast as mp3 and doesn't sound like shit

funkhowser1

(43 posts)
3. Love the graph!
Sun Oct 28, 2012, 12:08 AM
Oct 2012

And how 8 tracks and cassettes eventually go away. Have loads of both still around. Wish I had the equipment to play some of them, especially concerts recorded off the radio during the 70s-80s. Time marches on.

 

Lizzie Poppet

(10,164 posts)
6. /this
Sun Dec 9, 2012, 02:53 AM
Dec 2012

Of course, one of the reasons for the fast download is because there's simply less information there...and thus the inferior sound. FLAC or ALAC sound a lot better, but still download a lot faster than a .wav or AIFF. I'm pretty content with 'em...

ascrodin

(12 posts)
4. 000
Mon Nov 12, 2012, 03:20 AM
Nov 2012

I'd have thought the percentage for vinyl would be higher for 2010 than what the graph says. Is the whole "vinyl resurgence" really just a niche/cult/"indie" thing? Or does graph only represent sales of "new" discs? I'm sure sales of used vinyl are UP!

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