I also wonder about home theater sound.  People have the 60 and 70 inch
screens, maybe they have a Dolby or DTS 5.1/6.1/7.1 capable sound system,
but do any of the streaming services deliver the audio to drive those?  Or
is it just stereo, I think so.  But nobody seems to care enough to watch it
on Blu-Ray.

 

Apollo 13 was on TV today.  Great movie, never get tired of watching it.
But I’d like to watch it with Dolby HD sound.  Maybe I can go to Chuck’s
house, I seem to remember he has an actual Home Theater, like Howard Hughes.

 

Oh, and have you been reading the reviews from CES of the superthin OLED TV
screens with the electronics in a separate box?

 

 

From: Af [mailto:af-boun...@afmug.com] On Behalf Of Bill Prince
Sent: Sunday, January 8, 2017 4:19 PM
To: af@afmug.com
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT - is the music CD dead?

 

It may be dead, but then it might come back too; just like vinyl. OTOH,
maybe we are finding we want "music", but we don't really want to "listen".
People with good ears can tell the difference between MP3, CD, hi-res audio
(24-bit and/or flac), and vinyl. I can sometimes tell the difference, but
most of the time I'm not concentrating on the music. Most of the time, I'm
just looking for the mood.

This sums it up nicely:
https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/aug/21/mp3-cd-24-bit-audio-music
-hi-res

 

bp
<part15sbs{at}gmail{dot}com>
 

On 1/8/2017 1:14 PM, Ken Hohhof wrote:

Those of you outside the US or with friends and relatives there, is this
just a US thing, that all music is either in the cloud and streamed, or
electronically downloaded to an iPhone/iPod like device?

�

Amazon pretty much killed off the brick-and-mortar record stores, but now I
find that even Amazon doesn�t seem too interested in carrying CDs.� They
may have recent releases, but otherwise what you get is other sellers on the
Amazon storefront.� And these other sellers are predominantly in the UK,
followed by Japan and Germany.� Which leads me to believe people in those
countries still buy CDs, maybe at actual record stores.� So is this a
cultural difference?� Or is the trend just hitting Europe and Japan a
little later than here?

�

One thing I miss are the EP singles, not the 2 songs on 7 inch vinyl, more
like 4-5 songs on a CD.� Often these were exclusive for Borders or Barnes
& Noble, or sent out to record stores to promote an upcoming album.� Often
they had bonus tracks or live performances that never made it to the
albums.� I still see a few of these for Barnes & Noble but from sellers in
the UK, leading me to� believe that even Barnes & Noble sells more music
at their UK stores than here.

�

How long before physical media for content distribution is totally dead?�
Already pretty much true for software and games, plus software seems to be
going to the subscription model (like Office 365 and Adobe Creative
Cloud).� I suspect music CDs may not be long for this world, even though
vinyl has made a comeback � how strange.� Will they stop releasing
movies on Blu-Ray?� Will they work out DRM so you can buy movies via
electronic download, or will all video be streamed from the cloud?

�

Maybe what I�m missing is that most people today are never without their
phones, so that�s the only logical place to have their music.� I�m
probably a dinosaur, sticking a CD in the stereo, or grabbing a handful to
play in the car.

 

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