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by fredsmith219 1459 days ago
I feel the same way about vinyl aficionados. CDs were a godsend. Why would anyone want to go back to scratchy hissy delicate media? No, it doesn't sound better.
1 comments

Because it's human scale.
What does that mean?

That CDs are not scaled for humans?

BuildTheRobots 8 months ago | parent | context | favorite | on: Vinyl records are now outselling CDs

It sounds silly, but I find it extremely comforting to know I can play back my vinyl using entirely mechanical components. I don't expect the world to forget how to decode mp3s, or even loose the ability to generate electric to power my computers/storage to retrieve it. But, in the event all technology collapsing I've got a vibration trapped in a piece of vinyl, and I can play back by scraping a nail over it. There's something quite beautifully "pure" or simple about this. As much as analogue audio tape is doing similar, vinyl is a physical waveform.

Sure, in any world where this could happen there's going to be far more important things to worry about than playing back Paul Simon, but it seems easier to believe I could build a gramophone from first principals than a CD player. Comforting.

bombcar 8 months ago | next [–]

Vinyl is one of those things that is at the limit of human scale but still accessible - without any power you can spin a record and “hear” it by putting your ear near the needle. Both cassettes and CDs go out of human scale and into technology

They're more hobbit-sized I guess.