Posted on 04/23/2011 9:33:55 AM PDT by BenLurkin
{photo}Norio Ohga, holds a Sony Mini Disc in New York. Sony says Ohga, credited with developing the compact disc, has died Saturday, April 23, 2011. He was 81. Sony Corp. Chairman Howard Stringer said Ohga helped redefine the Japanese manufacturer not only as an electronic hardware company but helped it also expand into software or entertainment.
(Excerpt) Read more at finance.yahoo.com ...
Sadly, it's one of those really geat technologies that just died off. I don't know if you can even buy an MD player/recorder today, and certainly no pre-recorded media is available in that format.
RIP Ohga-san.
I think they have been superseeded by memory cards (all solid state) now.
Over that period of time, I collected some 1,250 CDs at a personal cost of approx. $15,000. Having ripped the bulk of those CDs to MP3s, they now sit uselessly in cardboard boxes up in my attic.
For a while, I thought I would be able to recover much of my investment by putting them for sale on eBay. However, the going rate on eBay for that Dire Straits "Brothers in Arms" CD that I purchased in 1985 for $17.98 (the first CD I ever purchased) is about $1.06. Then I have to package, label and ship the damn thing, keeping my fingers crossed that I don't get a poor seller rating on eBay because the liner note booklet has scuffs around the edges and the jewel case has a slight crack on the rear side.
And about those prices I used to pay for CDs...highway robbery. For at least the first 10 years of the compact disc, we had to listen to all that jive from the record companies telling us how we had to pay these premium prices because we were getting a product of "pristine" quality that would last several lifetimes. Evidently my great-grand children, in the year 2079, would be marveling over my pristine compact discs of Supertramp's "Breakfast In America" and "Reckless" by Bryan Adams.
So compacts discs for years remained at the $15.98 to $17.98 pricepoint because we consumers bought the lie that we were paying for state-of-the-art technology that would last for generations. So we started upgrading to compact disc all those perfectly fine recordings we spent the 1970s collecting in vinyl format. How many other people besides me remember selling all those Pink Floyd and Led Zeppelin LPs at yard sales so we could go to the local Tower Records to get that $15.98 CD of "Sports" by Huey Lewis and the News?
Then, in the late-1990s, when consumers realized you could buy a spindle of a hundred blank compact discs for about ten bucks at the CompUsa, they started to realize just how badly they were ripped off all those years.
It's amazing how quickly the compact disc went the way of the videotape and the floppy disk.
I've pretty much given up on buying music anymore. Now I just fire up Pandora, type in the kind of music I'm in the mood for hearing, and I'm perfectly happy to hear the same music for free that I used to spend thousands of dollars on.
YouTube is for all intents and purposes a great jukebox, any song you can think of is pretty much there.
I thought cds were just storage units for mp3s. You can use them for music now? Well what will they think of next.
Some (not all) of those old LPs will still fetch a pretty price, if in good condition. Original classical LPs from the “Golden Age” (RCA, Mercury, Decca,...) insanely so. CDs - not.
Like the hidden rootkit software on Sony CDs that would ****-up your computer from a few years ago? Congratulations on that, Sony. Though not affected, I'll never buy one of your products again, just out of principle.
RIP.
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