▲ | eterm 8 hours ago | ||||||||||||||||
> you never lose content due to lapsed subscription You do however lose content to phyiscal damage or just misplacement. I love CDs, but I've also lost some of my favourite CDs to damage or loss. Yes, the quality of recommendations is generally terrible, but the equivalent in the physical media age, walking into a CD store and hearing something you love, just sadly isn't coming back. Spotify etc are still unreasonably cheap for what they deliver, it costs the same as a couple of albums a month. | |||||||||||||||||
▲ | SoftTalker 6 hours ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
But another problem with online streams is that they are increasingly not the original music. More and more are remastered, autotuned, rebalanced to sound good on a phone speaker or earbuds. This can probably be done largely with AI now. A vinyl album or even a CD or local mp3 file is what it is when it was recorded, and will stay that way as long as it lasts. | |||||||||||||||||
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▲ | steveBK123 7 hours ago | parent | prev | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||
Most people outside their teenage years, unless music is their passion, are not actively engaging with the streaming services enough to consume 2 albums of new content monthly. The old iTunes pay per song / album model with 30+ second previews is arguably a better model than where we’ve landed. | |||||||||||||||||
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▲ | danaris 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||
This is why the happy medium is owning your own data. You can have the CDs or not, but owning your copy of the MP3 file, which you keep on a hard drive, or on a thumb drive, or on a portable SSD (in any of these cases, with a backup somewhere!), or wherever, means that 1) you can play it any time you want, for no extra money 2) your access to it can never be revoked 3) you can keep copying it onto new physical media any time you're worried about the old one wearing out |