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pdonis 6 hours ago

I never had the problems with tapes that the author describes--but I still preferred CDs when they came out, and I greatly prefer having my entire music library on a single USB stick that I can just plug into my car.

I was able to find my way around okay with paper maps--but I still prefer having GPS in my phone.

My issue with those passages is that the author is conflating "digital" or "computers are involved" with "Internet". They're not the same.

loloquwowndueo 6 hours ago | parent | next [-]

I’m not saying the newer alternatives are not convenient! Just saying the old ones were OK; not the garment-rending disaster TFA purports them to be.

pdonis 4 hours ago | parent [-]

It would appear that they were a "garment-rending disaster" at least to some, like the author of the article.

ajross 5 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

> having my entire music library on a single USB stick

Worth pointing out how this too is an example of somewhat mistaken value analysis based on libertarian ideals.

The market winning solution, of course, is to put THE entire music library, all of it, everyone's, in the cloud and get to it from any device anywhere.

Obviously you perceive value in the local storage that the rest of the market does not. Which was one of the points of the linked article.

bryanrasmussen 5 hours ago | parent | next [-]

>Obviously you perceive value in the local storage that the rest of the market does not.

lots of people perceive higher quality media as having value, in fact there are markets for those people, just not the largest market which values convenience more.

pdonis 2 hours ago | parent [-]

> the largest market which values convenience more

To me, having my music library on an USB stick is convenience. I don't have to worry about whether my car or something in it has an Internet connection just to listen to music.

pdonis 4 hours ago | parent | prev [-]

> The market winning solution, of course, is to put THE entire music library, all of it, everyone's, in the cloud and get to it from any device anywhere.

Not in a free market (which is part of "libertarian ideals", or at least it's supposed to be). In a free market, there is no single "solution"--there are whatever solutions people are willing to pay more than they cost for. If you want your music in the cloud, and you pay for that, and I want my music locally, and I pay for that, that is the libertarian ideal.

Trying to own the entire market and force your "solution" on everyone, just because you happen to have enough users to be able to get away with such bullying, at least for a time, is not a free market. But that's what the tech giants are trying to do.

> Obviously you perceive value in the local storage that the rest of the market does not.

That the majority of the market does not, yes. But I don't think I'm even close to being the only person that doesn't want to depend on "the cloud" for everything I do.