Actually listening to music again, pt 2 --------------------------------------- Here's the sequel to part 1[1]. In that entry I described how I came extremely close to buying a cheap used CD player and using a combination of my local library and dirt cheap used CDs to facilitate broadening my musical horizons without having to do business with Google, Apple or Amazon or using propritary software that won't run natively on my OSes of choice. One of the reasons I eventually decided not to was that I bought a MiniDisc[2] player instead! Depending on where you're from, this might require more or less explanation. The MiniDisc technology was differentially successfully around the world. It was a huge success in its native Japan and became an entirely mainstream music format. It was moderately successful in Europe but never really made it big. It was a total commercial failure in the United States. I haven't read anything on exactly how it did in Australia, in terms of actual numbers, but I managed to literally never even see one or hear about them during their hey day (not that I payed close attention to music technology back then) which I guess says a lot. Anyway, they were invented by Sony as a replacement for the casette tape as a format that consumers could record to, back in the days when CDs were still strictly a read-only format for home users. They are kind of like the ultimate merger of tapes and CDs: like tapes, you can very easily record stuff to them using the same device you listen to them with, just by plugging the device into a radio, tape deck, CD player, or microphone. So they inherit the "DIY" aspect of casette tapes and you can easily make MD "mix tapes". But unlike tapes and like CDs, they're digital, so the sound quality is much better, and you can "tape over" an MD with new content as many times as you like (well, up to a million times according to Sony's marketing) without any degredation of quality at all. Also like CDs they are random access and track-based, so you can skip tracks easily rather than having to fast forward through an undivided linear audio stream. You can even delete individual tracks, change their order around, etc. Most MDs can hold 74 minutes of audio at standard "SP" quality, but like VHS tapes you can sacrifice quality for playtime at hold double that in LP2 mode or four times in LP4. They're really quite unlike anything else, and must have seemed futuristic as *hell* back in the 90s. I'll freely admit that a large part of my motivation to buy one was sheer curiosity about and fascination with these strange little things, which look like the shrunken lovechild of a CD and a 3.5" floppy disk. I try very hard to not to buy new consumer electronics devices because I think the vast majority are designed and built in such a way that they become obsolete or damaged beyond economical repair way, way too quickly for the tremendous environmental impact of manufacturing them to be reasonably considered "paid back" by utility. So I satisfy my natural geeky instincts by buying and using obsolete tech that's otherwise in danger of ending up as landfill. Not willy-nilly, mind you, I stick to stuff that I think I'll genuinely use and which does its job well, maybe even in some ways better than modern equivalents. But beyond the retro-tech fasincation, I also think this thing will genuinely help out in my musical quest. Even though as soon as it became possible I very quickly switched to ripping all my music CDs to mp3 (using, by the way, the wonderful, wonderful `abcd` tool) and playing my entire collection in random shuffle mode while at my computer (a terrible way to really listen to music, but I had such narrow taste back then this provided a fairly cohesive listening experience most of the time), I think I still kept anchored to my music collection because I couldn't listen to it this way on the go. While taking the train to and from university as a student (almost an hour each way) I at first listened to CDs on my portable CD player, and then later on I got my first mp3 player, a cute little red plastic thing by iRiver which held a whopping 256MB, so it could fit a few albums on there but certainly not a whole collection. This meant I was regularly rotating through small subsets of my collection, and whenever I bought a new album it spent a good bit of time in that rotation so I still had a chance to experience it as a cohesive, well, experience, over and over again, before it got assimilated into the giant random shuffle pile. At some point it became so easy to carry an entire collection with you that I started basically doing *nothing* but random shuffling through huge piles and I think this has really hindered my efforts to get enthusiastic about new music. When I first started getting really burned out on my old ripped-from-CD metal library, I talked to a few friends about it, asking for suggestions. One of my friends at the time was a big post-rock fan, a genre I'd never even heard of. She played me a few tracks and I kind of liked it, so I gave her the USB drive off my keychain and she immediately dumped a few gigs of the stuff on there. Then I took it home and random shuffled through the whole thing. At this point I've probably heard every song she gave me a hundred times or more, but I couldn't name one of them if you played it to me, and although I could name a couple of artists I don't have a good sense of who is who or how anybody's sound evolved over time or anything like that. I think it's really important that I start consuming music in small, structured doses again, like I used to when that limitation was forced upon me by physical media. So...why not actually use physical media for exactly that reason? Yes, I could just stop being such a lazy user of digital music technology and curate playlists and pick specific albums to play, etc. But, honestly, at this point I have a personal laptop, a work laptop, and a smartphone, and keeping both a music library *and* a set of playlists synchronised across all those devices is just way more hassle than I want to deal with, and I know without even looking that all the smart phone software for doing this will be garbage because, well, it's smart phone software. Having a single portable music device I use everywhere just makes my life simpler. So my plan now is to maintain a large digital library on my personal laptop only, and record from it to a small collection of MDs (no more than 10 - the 10 disc project from last post lives on!) which will be my primary means of actually listening to it. I suspect I'll have some discs dedicated permanently, or very long term, to favourite artists, one disc which I constantly record over with my most recent bandcamp purchases so I can spend quality time with them, and some "mixtape" discs with assorted music of a particular genre or mood which can evolve slowly over time as I add and remove tracks - physical playlists, basically. Having to pick music to record to discs, having to pick discs to listen to and having to change them out when I get bored will require me to think a lot more carefully about what's in my collection, what goes well with what, what I'm in the mood for, and generally be a whole lot more involved in the process than random shuffling an entire library or tuning in to an internet stream and paying no attention to what's playing. Worst case scenario, I get tired of the whole thing and re-sell the player and discs for something close to what I paid for it to somebody else who is interested in obsolete technology. It won't be difficult. But so far, I'm pretty smitten with this device (a Sony MZ-R700, by the way). I've written before[3] about how much I hate the fact that proprietary, non-replacable lithium batteries doom so many otherwise serviceable consumer electronic devices to a premature end of life. My MD player runs on a single AA battery, I shit you not. This is not a solid state memory device, this is a thing that spins physical media with a motor! It has a laser and a magnetic head in it. And yet it runs on one AA, with Sony quoting 46 hours playing time (at LP2 quality, which is good enough for my ears) off one battery. It's possible if you use really high quality modern batteries like Panasonic's Eneloops, you could do even better than this (although I can't say I've actually tried this). This is kind of like how by putting modern film emulsions in old cameras you can take better (in some ways) photos with them than you could in their hey day, because the standardised format means that technological advances are entirely back-portable to older devices. I have to say, after being indoctrinated by years of "smart" devices which need recharing of their proprietary batteries every day, or every second day at best, and then eventually every half day as the battery starts to stop holding charge and you nervously start trying to find a genuine replacement at a sane price, it seems like pure friggin' magic to buy an almost 20 year old device, to have absolutely no trouble at all finding and cheaply buying a brand new, high quality, Japanese-made rechargable battery for it which is 100% compatible, and then get almost two straight days of playback out of it (i.e. easily a week of regular listening). We have genuinely lost something really important from our user experience. It's true a lot of early mp3 players - including, actually, my cute little red iRiver from earlier in this post - ran on AAs or AAAs. They probably would offer even longer life than my MD player. But a goodly percentage of those would have needed proprietary USB cables to upload music to them, long since lost by the original owner, and/or would require proprietary software that only runs on Windows XP or a contemporary Apple OS. This thing records, no computer necessary, from anything you like, either analogue sources via a 3.5mm line in or digital sources via TOSLINK optical cable. It feels supernaturally future-proof. Yeah, it has moving parts and one day the motor will burn out or the laser will get knocked out of alignment, or something. But it won't be killed by battery issues like most new devices sold this year will, and it won't be killed by shifting standards in computer OSes or interface cables, or discontuation of firmware updates from the manufacturer, like the remainder will. It will be a genuinely useful portable audio player and recorder up until the day it physically wears out. If you can't get excited by that kind of tech, what the hell is wrong with you? [1] gopher://zaibatsu.circumlunar.space:70/0/~solderpunk/phlog/actually-listening-to-music-again-1.txt [2] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MiniDisc [3] gopher://zaibatsu.circumlunar.space:70/0/~solderpunk/phlog/lithium-blues.txt