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Damn RIAA
Nadius - Jun 7, 2002
 Nadius Jun 7, 2002
lol, oh my god.

There's a new piracy proof disc....

hehe. reading about this at shortnews.com, i thought it was true for a second.

 Cynnamin Jun 8, 2002
actually, it IS true

 antime Jun 8, 2002
Is it?...

 slinga Jun 8, 2002
Piracy is impossible to stop. If I can play something on ANY type of player, and that includes a vinyl turntable, I can run RCA inputs to my pc's sound card and record. It won't be a perfect copy, but with a top of the line sound card it will be close.

Also a PC will never be able to read a vinyl disc properly. Computers can only work with discrete data, such as the 0s and 1s on a cd; not continous analog data like those found on vinyl discs. Somewhere the pc must estimate the sound.

 Gallstaff Jun 8, 2002
wow... that is the stupidest hunk of crap i've ever heard in my whole life.

(A). if that was true, no one would go buy a new turntable just to play these and thus the product would eventually fade away... unless the quality was of supirior sound to that of mp3's or CD's

and (. That article looks so damn fake anyway.

(i know it's not true, i'm just saying why bother to make an article like that and try to get people to belive that this could happen? haha)

 mal Jun 9, 2002
Gallstaff, you're priceless.

 sheep64 Jun 9, 2002

  
	
	
Originally posted by slinga@June 08 2002,15:07

... I can run RCA inputs to my pc's sound card and record. It won't be a perfect copy, but with a top of the line sound card it will be close. ...


When you would use a CD Player with Digital Out and a PC Soundcard with digital in there should not be any differences between original and copy.

The only problem is that you need a bit more time to copy a CD, but who cares...

It would be like in the old days when people copied CD´s to tape..

 VertigoXX Jun 9, 2002
I've already got a turntable hooked up to my PC. Strange hobby of mine. Did ya know that many albums were too long to put on CD when the format was new, so they cut songs off of them? Now that we have slightly longer CD's than they did 15 years ago, I like getting that extra song and putting it back into the album.

I also like getting my hands on old classical recordings and restoring them a bit. Many of the restored recordings I have purchased, I have not been happy with the sound quality. So I hit the Goodwill stores and flea markets to find copies of the same performances on vinyl.

 DBOY Jun 9, 2002
LP > CD

 sizone Jun 9, 2002
if dropped

cd>lp

else

lp>cd

 Subura Jun 9, 2002
UMm Vinal, umm burning ripping tracks off of vinal onto 8 track

wow that was a long time ago

 FLEABttn Jun 10, 2002

  
	
	
Originally posted by DBOY@June 09 2002,12:13

LP > CD


Yeah...no. CD>LP

 mal Jun 10, 2002
Depends on your taste in sound (not music).

Some people love the 'warmth' found with records and can't stand CDs because they find them to be cold and harsh.

 sizone Jun 10, 2002
people's taste in music has alot to do with it too

there's millions of albums that haven't been remastered and rereleased. if you really wanna hear some last poets albums vinyl is still the only way to go.

there's also alot of weird people in the solielmoon cataloge who contintue to this very day to press shit in an excluisively RECORD format.

mr. wizard is alive and well and not hooked on crack

remember that segement on mr. wizard?, take an lp, super glue one of those foam thread spooles ovedr the hole in the middle, inflate a ballon and secure it over the spoole, now you have mysterious HOVER LP.

see... lp>cd

 Curtis Jun 10, 2002
I think mal was refering to the fact that the CD cannot reproduce a perfect sine wave the way an analogue LP can, hence the "harshness" of the sound.