- Joined
- Jun 13, 2016
I dug out my boombox the other day and listened to a CD on it for the first time in years. I forgot just how crisp and clean a good CD player can sound. I usually use my car's CD player, but there were details within the song I was picking up with the boombox that I simply wasn't with my car. My car's sound system is good, but it's harder to appreciate the finer details, especially when you're on the road and have to focus on other things.
I guess I just miss good CD sound systems.
That's also going to be because CDs are an order of magnitude better in sound quality than the 128 kbps MP3 that streaming insists on using. Their only downside is that they can be buggered quite easily into unplayability. That, and disc rot for older burned discs (i.e. CD-Rs and CD-RWs, as opposed to commercial and pre-recorded discs which are pressed; it's to do with the fact that burned discs rely on chemical alterations in the dyes to simulate the pits and lands that are physically stamped into a pre-recorded disc and some of the earlier dye formulations weren't that stable.)
I've been getting into taping and with my big ol' Sharp ghettoblaster from 1983 you CAN hear the difference between 128kbps MP3 and FLAC, whether you play it directly via the aux port from a digital device or stick it onto a tape (even alternate sides of the same tape). It really does make a difference. But alas, by penny pinching on bandwidth and you owning nothing and being happy, people are being conditioned to think 128kbps is acceptable.