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Found that MD - but it's in poor condition
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: Eeyore wrote: Why is optical media so efffing ****e ? ? Will transcribe ASAP. I've been using MDs from shortly after they came out and haven't had any problems with them. There's plenty of 'birdie tone' like spuriae in various places. Haven't found the mini-jack to mini-jack lead yet btw. I gets used about once every few years. Graham |
Found that MD - but it's in poor condition
In article ,
Eeyore wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: Eeyore wrote: Why is optical media so efffing ****e ? ? Will transcribe ASAP. I've been using MDs from shortly after they came out and haven't had any problems with them. There's plenty of 'birdie tone' like spuriae in various places. Haven't found the mini-jack to mini-jack lead yet btw. I gets used about once every few years. Ah - right. All my machines are mains ones - don't have a portable. I have a stack of them I used to use for grams work in TV studios after 1/4" became semi obsolete and before things like the 460 were around. They're Sony JB-930 modified to balance in/out - although I used earlier Sony machines to start with. It was a cheaper/ more versatile solution than using pro MD machines. Graham -- *All generalizations are false. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Found that MD - but it's in poor condition
"Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: Eeyore wrote: "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: Eeyore wrote: Why is optical media so efffing ****e ? ? Will transcribe ASAP. I've been using MDs from shortly after they came out and haven't had any problems with them. There's plenty of 'birdie tone' like spuriae in various places. Haven't found the mini-jack to mini-jack lead yet btw. I gets used about once every few years. Ah - right. All my machines are mains ones - don't have a portable. I have a stack of them I used to use for grams work in TV studios after 1/4" became semi obsolete and before things like the 460 were around. They're Sony JB-930 modified to balance in/out - although I used earlier Sony machines to start with. It was a cheaper/ more versatile solution than using pro MD machines. OK, thanks for that. Mine is a Sony MZ-R70 MD Walkman. I gather it was a fairly high end model at the time. I won it in a Virgin competition ! Otherwise I'd not really have had any use for one. I was using Sharp MD-R80 media FWIW. Maybe I should check some other MDs I recorded ? Graham |
Found that MD - but it's in poor condition
In article ,
Eeyore wrote: There's plenty of 'birdie tone' like spuriae in various places. Haven't found the mini-jack to mini-jack lead yet btw. I gets used about once every few years. Ah - right. All my machines are mains ones - don't have a portable. I have a stack of them I used to use for grams work in TV studios after 1/4" became semi obsolete and before things like the 460 were around. They're Sony JB-930 modified to balance in/out - although I used earlier Sony machines to start with. It was a cheaper/ more versatile solution than using pro MD machines. OK, thanks for that. Mine is a Sony MZ-R70 MD Walkman. I gather it was a fairly high end model at the time. I won it in a Virgin competition ! Otherwise I'd not really have had any use for one. I was using Sharp MD-R80 media FWIW. Maybe I should check some other MDs I recorded ? I'm sure it's possible to have faulty discs - and they may well deteriorate with age if the storage conditions are less than ideal. But I've not had a problem as I said. I loved MD as a replacement for cassette and was surprised it never really caught on. -- *One of us is thinking about sex... OK, it's me. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
Found that MD - but it's in poor condition
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
I loved MD as a replacement for cassette and was surprised it never really caught on. Loadsa reasons. Mainly the iPod & other MP3 players killed it ... Initially another format (DCC) caused consumer confusion. Shops didn't want to stock the read-only MiniDisc format and Sony were a bit too restrictive on ATRAC & SCMS usage and (for serious use) direct data access on the actual MiniDisc itself. I bought into Sony MiniDisc for the Hi-Fi (JB-920), the Car (MDX-C6500R) and the Pocket (MZ-R30). The JB-920 only gets used nowadays for AD/DA conversions with my PC but the other items are getting coated with a fine layer of dust .... -- Adrian C |
Found that MD - but it's in poor condition
"Adrian C" wrote in message
... Dave Plowman (News) wrote: I loved MD as a replacement for cassette and was surprised it never really caught on. Loadsa reasons. Mainly the iPod & other MP3 players killed it ... Initially another format (DCC) caused consumer confusion. All of those appeared on the market long after MD, and DCC never amounted to anything at all. What I think did significantly hurt it was the advent of PCs with CD burners. It was a lot cheaper to burn a CD which could then be played on existing CD players, and MD equipment was never cheap. Shops didn't want to stock the read-only MiniDisc format and Sony were a bit too restrictive on ATRAC & SCMS usage and (for serious use) direct data access on the actual MiniDisc itself. What "serious use" would direct-access have been? David. |
Found that MD - but it's in poor condition
David Looser wrote:
Mainly the iPod & other MP3 players killed it ... Initially another format (DCC) caused consumer confusion. All of those appeared on the market long after MD, and DCC never amounted to anything at all. MD launched 1991, DCC launched 1992. Some Daily Mail readers held off both, confused by it all... The iPod wasn't that far behind after the sales of the MD walkmans started taking off post 1996. I bought my MZ-R30 in 1998 and the first iPod launched in 2001. (between that, I build my own "iPod", but that's another story...) What I think did significantly hurt it was the advent of PCs with CD burners. It was a lot cheaper to burn a CD which could then be played on existing CD players, and MD equipment was never cheap. Yup, forgot about the CD burner. :-) What "serious use" would direct-access have been? David. Direct copying without repeated ATRAC degradation. -- Adrian C |
Found that MD - but it's in poor condition
"Adrian C" wrote in message
... David Looser wrote: Mainly the iPod & other MP3 players killed it ... Initially another format (DCC) caused consumer confusion. All of those appeared on the market long after MD, and DCC never amounted to anything at all. MD launched 1991, DCC launched 1992. Some Daily Mail readers held off both, confused by it all... Was DCC really that long ago?, how time flies :-( But I remain to be convinced that Daily Mail readers would have bought either, or had ever heard of DCC. There was also DAT, originally intended for the domestic market and launched in 1987. At the time some pundits were predicting that it would be a serious threat to the then new CD format, whilst in fact DAT made no noticeable impression on the domestic market at all. The iPod wasn't that far behind after the sales of the MD walkmans started taking off post 1996. I bought my MZ-R30 in 1998 and the first iPod launched in 2001. (between that, I build my own "iPod", but that's another story...) 1991 to 2001 sounds like a fair time for MD to have established a significant toe-hold in the market, if it was ever going to do so. I guess that MD simply didn't have what it takes to make it as a domestic format. Whilst it had a lot going for it as a replacement for carts in broadcasting and theatre use it's advantages over the existing domestic formats (mainly CD and analogue cassette) simply weren't enough to overcome consumer resistance to spending money on yet another new (and expensive) format. What "serious use" would direct-access have been? Direct copying without repeated ATRAC degradation. Ah!, right. David. |
Found that MD - but it's in poor condition
In article ,
Adrian C wrote: I loved MD as a replacement for cassette and was surprised it never really caught on. Loadsa reasons. Mainly the iPod & other MP3 players killed it ... Well yes - many years later. Initially another format (DCC) caused consumer confusion. I know of even fewer who bothered with that. Shops didn't want to stock the read-only MiniDisc format and Sony were a bit too restrictive on ATRAC & SCMS usage and (for serious use) direct data access on the actual MiniDisc itself. Still doesn't explain why it didn't catch on for those who made their own copies of stuff. Could be the fact that car radios didn't often have them. I bought into Sony MiniDisc for the Hi-Fi (JB-920), the Car (MDX-C6500R) and the Pocket (MZ-R30). The JB-920 only gets used nowadays for AD/DA conversions with my PC but the other items are getting coated with a fine layer of dust .... Yes - it's actually a very useful A-D and D-A convertor. -- *I'll try being nicer if you'll try being smarter Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
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