Interesting video but now I feel worried we won't get physical media anymore.
Disc rot is a thing and making backups of physical media containing licensed content is illegal in many countries - although never enforced as far as I know.
I detest physical media and love the convenience of all digital. That being said, I also think we should invest in several terabytes of storage and pull in digital copies of media we've purchased in case a site or channel goes away.
Physical bookstores are making a comeback in some areas, at least in the romance genre. There are bookstores that only carry that genre plus other things associated with it (I would guess that stuff like candles and wine glasses and other such claptrap is part of it).If people keep buying it they'll keep making it. Books are still very popular despite digital versions being easier to store and cheaper most of the time.
Yep. My book collection includes a few dozen Creative Haven and other coloring books (some are based on historical periods - medieval, ancient Egypt, etc.). There's one of them that has special paper that requires using wax crayons to get a stained glass effect. It's amazing how cool they turn out - it's a book of mandalas, and I finally bought multiple copies of the book to try different color combinations for the same pictures. Since I like coloring different versions of the Sun in Splendor theme, I was happy to discover that the local Staples sells boxes of single crayon colors. So I stocked up on the colors I use most frequently.Same I like collecting drawing books which show you different techniques and styles. I find that fun and interesting. I also have a few books about fashions in different periods which I have used as springboards for ideas for shoots, and sometimes taken them with me to show models ideas. Things like that don't feel the same on a tablet or phone.
If I had a player, I could answer that. I have an 8-track of one of William Shatner's appearances at a Star Trek convention in the early 1970s (audio only, obviously).I have it on good authority, that random ordinary humans, part of the resistance against anti-intellectualism, will soon have to memorize entire novels verbatim, to preserve classic literature for a distant more enlightened future.
Did anyone ever figure out the life expectancy of eight tracks?
I detest physical media
For my Christmas 2022 present to myself, I bought an all-regions DVD player and the BBC Merlin series from the UK (the UK version was over $100 cheaper than the American version, even taking currency conversion into account). So now, if I can find any other UK or Australian series I want to watch, I've got a way to see it.
8-track tape's frequency response is similar to that of average cassette tape, falling off pretty sharply at about 16 kHz. Wow and flutter for 8-track is at best 0.15%, often significantly worse; cassettes can manage 0.08% or better - but, of course, actual performance depends on the maintenance of the playing device, wear and tear, and environmental conditions.But what was the audio quality of 8 track compared to cassette tapes?
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