I was there
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Vinyl records being popular again is very cool and not a comeback I would have ever expected. What's really interesting to me is how much better quality they are than in previous decades.
Records had been around for a century (vinyl for about 40 years) by the time they were phased out of mainstream music distribution in the late 80's. Over time, manufacturers used cheaper and thinner vinyl to the point where they were just complete and utter shit.
The ones they put out today are thicker and closer to audiophile grade than their predecessors.
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Vinyl records being popular again is very cool and not a comeback I would have ever expected. What's really interesting to me is how much better quality they are than in previous decades.
Records had been around for a century (vinyl for about 40 years) by the time they were phased out of mainstream music distribution in the late 80's. Over time, manufacturers used cheaper and thinner vinyl to the point where they were just complete and utter shit.
The ones they put out today are thicker and closer to audiophile grade than their predecessors.
Hasn't vinyl been around longer than 1985?
I suddenly feel old, doing the math wasn't nice to me
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Hasn't vinyl been around longer than 1985?
I suddenly feel old, doing the math wasn't nice to me
They're saying that by the late 80s when cassettes and CDs ultimately replaced the record, records had been in use for over a century, and the recognizable 12" disc format had been in use for 40 years prior to their replacement.
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half the people you run into in public would struggle to operate a spoon without guidance.
I wouldn't. I know how to clean my nose with a spoon!
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Vinyl records being popular again is very cool and not a comeback I would have ever expected. What's really interesting to me is how much better quality they are than in previous decades.
Records had been around for a century (vinyl for about 40 years) by the time they were phased out of mainstream music distribution in the late 80's. Over time, manufacturers used cheaper and thinner vinyl to the point where they were just complete and utter shit.
The ones they put out today are thicker and closer to audiophile grade than their predecessors.
Erm I have vinal records my dad gave me from the 50s
You are correct they are thin as shit though compared to the ones I buy now
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They're saying that by the late 80s when cassettes and CDs ultimately replaced the record, records had been in use for over a century, and the recognizable 12" disc format had been in use for 40 years prior to their replacement.
Oh duh, I misread that
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Okay Boomer
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Brief moment in history...
I remember reading this tip in a magazine. Instead of having a professional photographer at a wedding, put a disposable camera at every table.
That should be a tip for your reception, not the wedding itself.
These days it's reasonably common to replace the disposable cameras with a QR code or link to where people can upload photos they took on their phone.
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Vinyl records being popular again is very cool and not a comeback I would have ever expected. What's really interesting to me is how much better quality they are than in previous decades.
Records had been around for a century (vinyl for about 40 years) by the time they were phased out of mainstream music distribution in the late 80's. Over time, manufacturers used cheaper and thinner vinyl to the point where they were just complete and utter shit.
The ones they put out today are thicker and closer to audiophile grade than their predecessors.
It seems hit or miss. Most of my vinyl is 180 gram, I guess because it isn't the primary means of consumption for music these days, people expect to pay a little more for better quality. But I definitely have a lot of cheaper, thinner records that I bought brand new in the last few years.
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Just try getting a technologically illiterate person to click in next during an install is like finding hens teeth, except if it comes up with an error they'll dismiss it instantly without reading it.
I used to work tech support during the Windows XP days. One time I had a customer call in and, as part of the troubleshooting process, I asked them to click their Start button. The customer didn't know what that was so I told them that it was the button in the corner of the screen. The customer said that they did that and the screen went blank. They'd hit the power button on their monitor.
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I am a banana.
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I used to work tech support during the Windows XP days. One time I had a customer call in and, as part of the troubleshooting process, I asked them to click their Start button. The customer didn't know what that was so I told them that it was the button in the corner of the screen. The customer said that they did that and the screen went blank. They'd hit the power button on their monitor.
Didn't the Windows XP button actually say Start on it?
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Vinyl records being popular again is very cool and not a comeback I would have ever expected. What's really interesting to me is how much better quality they are than in previous decades.
Records had been around for a century (vinyl for about 40 years) by the time they were phased out of mainstream music distribution in the late 80's. Over time, manufacturers used cheaper and thinner vinyl to the point where they were just complete and utter shit.
The ones they put out today are thicker and closer to audiophile grade than their predecessors.
Same thing happened with casette tapes and cassette mechanisms.
Most people think cassette tapes were terrible, because they remember the bargain basement iron tapes and no noise reduction. A top quality chrome casette when recorded well and played back on the right hardware is very difficult to tell apart from the digital original.
Similar story with VHS to be honest.
There's a "minimum acceptable quality" which people were willing to tolerate, and manufacturers inevietably converge towards it in an effort to shave off a few cents here and there.
Audiophile now is very different, because it's not a mass market consumer format any longer - it's a niche hobby, and people are willing to pay top money for their hobbies.
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I was telling a kid today how we'd sit by the radio, hoping to record a song onto a cassette tape, pleading with the gods that we wouldn't miss the start, and that the DJ wouldn't talk over the end of the song, or fade it into another one
She accused me of being from the stone age
Don't forget to mention using the pause button rather than stop. You don't want the sound of the tape speeding up on the next song.
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Kids will never know the satisfaction of fully filling a 90 minute tape with no weird silences at the ends of each side
Silence? Nah, here's half a song, hope you weren't enjoying that one.
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Same thing happened with casette tapes and cassette mechanisms.
Most people think cassette tapes were terrible, because they remember the bargain basement iron tapes and no noise reduction. A top quality chrome casette when recorded well and played back on the right hardware is very difficult to tell apart from the digital original.
Similar story with VHS to be honest.
There's a "minimum acceptable quality" which people were willing to tolerate, and manufacturers inevietably converge towards it in an effort to shave off a few cents here and there.
Audiophile now is very different, because it's not a mass market consumer format any longer - it's a niche hobby, and people are willing to pay top money for their hobbies.
Really? I've heard the opposite: that modern cassette players are garbage because they all reuse the same Chinese mechanism with mono playback and no Dolby noise reduction.
If you want a good cassette player, you're supposed to buy one from the 80s or 90s, preferably a Sony.
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Really? I've heard the opposite: that modern cassette players are garbage because they all reuse the same Chinese mechanism with mono playback and no Dolby noise reduction.
If you want a good cassette player, you're supposed to buy one from the 80s or 90s, preferably a Sony.
Well yes that's true.
The modern hobbyist resurgence is in vinyl, not cassette. I was only mentioning cassette to make the point that the same phenomenon occurs in other media too - of technologies getting worse over time. Especially true in cassette, in fact.
Good cassettes players are old ones.
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Two teens asked me if I would take their picture and I said sure. One of them handed me her phone and I ran away with it. Hey, free phone.
(shut up, it's a fucking joke)
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If you've ever worked customer service, you know that automatically providing instructions is warranted; half the people you run into in public would struggle to operate a spoon without guidance.
And it is me. I am people.
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I actually saw a shop that developed film the other day in my local area. Genuinely surprised and delighted me. Got a brief trip through time and space to nostalgia land where I was constantly being told off for taking photos of landscape.