I was in Publix the other day when this really eccentric wizard looking lady approached me and had a story about how she needed a few bucks. She said she had music for sale that she made herself. I said well how do I purchase it? She reached into her bag and said “ I’ve got cds “ I gave her a few bucks and was on my way feeling good. Got into my fucking car and realized oh shit I’m not a teenager anymore in my old car with a cd player like I thought I was for a solid 10 minutes after buying the damn thing. Got home and had to dig out a cd player for my laptop. Music was weird as fuck which I enjoyed. She bought a jug of cough syrup with the money lmfao
Ok clearly it’s not literally about making CDs and people saying “just make your own streaming service” are both missing the point and vastly over estimating the capacity of the average person.
The important part that’s largely missing from today’s music environment is the personal touch and investment. Many people, as the author says, just comfortably coast through an algorithmic smoothie of familiar music. That is inferior to a friend saying “I made you this mix” and then you actually listen to it, attentively, more than once.
It doesn’t have to be a CD. It can be a zip file. But the intention and focus was important.
I’m an outlier in that I never let “the algorithm” choose what plays. Sometimes I still make mixes for friends, though lately they’ve just been a collection of links. That process of choosing is meaningful. My friend still listens to the mix I made for them when their job laid them off, sometimes.
What no love for the mixtape? We have to go straight to CD?
Bring back that whole timeframe. We weren’t all so stuck up our phone’s ass.
Yeah, growing up as a teen it was the opposite. I was burning CDs and had this phone stuck up my ass

No, we need transferable digital licenses. I want to both own my software and download it on the go
There was a certain intentionality to burning a CD that a Spotify link just can’t replicate. Spending an hour picking the perfect songs to fit exactly 80 minutes, and then handwriting the tracklist… it was a real labor of love. It’s a shame that convenience has replaced that personal touch.
This is stupid. Just make your own streaming service.
It seems to me like the world has had 3 phases:
- Phase 1: People own media on records, tapes, etc. because that’s the only way to listen to what you want whenever you want. The only alternative is radio, where you listen to what the DJ thinks you should hear. If you buy something once, you can listen to it whenever you want forever. (Or at least as long as the medium holds up)
- Phase 2: It was relatively easy to get the media you wanted on demand, but it wasn’t always legal, because the copyright cartels were used to a certain way of doing business and didn’t like disruption. During this phase people still bought read-only media in stores. But, they also sometimes bought blank media and filled it up from their computers at home.
- Phase 3: Everything is now online, and you no longer own media. In this phase you can listen to / watch whatever you want, but you don’t get to own anything, and you have to pay monthly if you don’t want your media viewing / listening to be interrupted by ads. In this phase, media you love can just disappear if someone loses the license to stream it, or the copyright owner decides to pull it or modify it. In this version someone like George Lucas can decide that the version of Star Wars you grew up on should change, and you now have to accept his new version.
Unfortunately, long-term storage hasn’t kept pace with short-term storage and bandwidth. You can make someone a “mix tape” that’s a USB stick, but if someone puts it on a shelf it might not be readable in 5 years. You could save the original version of Star Wars to a NAS. But, if your friend wants to borrow it, it’s not as easy as grabbing a case off the bookshelf and handing it over.
I keep hoping that one of these “crystal storage” mechanisms takes off. Then we can much more easily be data hoarders, keeping everything, and not relying on a continued subscription to a streaming service for our favourite media.
Once you break up, fantastic tree ornaments also.
You can make a million other hand-made things. But sure bring back obsolete tech.
While your jacking off into your Xfinity/Comcast/NBC/Meta/Google/Micorosft/Amazon DNA test to prove you’re allowed to watch the next ad that only plays while it detects your eyeballs on the screen…
I’ll be watching Lord of The Rings Extended Edition on Blue Ray.
I never stopped. How else am I going to burn PS1, Dreamcast, and 360 games?
I think all of these have sdcard mods now (and the 360 had long had HDD mods from memory).
Oh yeah, they do. I’m just weird lol
360 wasn’t DVD?
It was.
Mix tapes were better
They each have their place. Tapes fit in your pocket though, which was great for casual carry. I always had a mix tape in my pocket.
I have lots of playlist cds, same thing. Better skipping function.
Not the same thing
what’s a CD?
CDs nuts!
Goteem
CD is just an acronym for the Compact Disc media format.
You can get one at a bank. It is short for certificate of deposit. It’s basically a high interest savings account that is difficult to access until it matures. They are at or above 4% now at some banks, so it is a relatively safe investment that is slightly higher than inflation.
this is a good reminder to finish that mix CD I’m halfway through putting together
How 'bout we tweak that just a tiny bit and use flash drives instead?







