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by silvestrov 1238 days ago
Analog computers are like LP records: only good for nostalgia.
1 comments

Depth of sound, long term storage, ease of navigation, there are lots of reasons people prefer vinyl that aren't based in nostalgia.
What do you mean by depth of sound? A vinyl record has a dynamic range of around 70db, where as a CD has a dynamic range of up to 144db, though in practice it is usually only 90-96db. Either way you shake that stick though, digital audio (uncompressed) has a much deeper sound.

Even in the recording studio back in the days of vinyl pressings all ran on studio grade magnetic tape with a higher dynamic range (not by much, albeit), but the sound that the artist was going for was typically hindered by analog recording media in a way that isn't true today.

Often vinyl records are much more carefully mastered when compared to their CD counterparts. Many of us are survivors of the loudness wars. https://www.yoursoundmatters.com/vinyl-vs-cd-in-the-loudness...
Ugh, this frustrates me. You are just saying that the _mix_ put on vinyl is better than the mix put on CD. That same mix put on CD would be even better due to higher fidelity of the format. Vinyl is a strictly worse format... unfortunately it's also an easier source of better mixes.
Not a vinyl purist, but the argument is that the same mix sounds different pressed into vinyl vs burned to disc because they reproduce the frequencies differently when read. You would have to engineer the CD mix differently to match the sound of the vinyl.
I mean... So you can't record high frequencies on vinyl... if you WANTED the CD to sound like vinyl you could intentionally alias the high frequencies. But why would you want to do that?

It's not really a case of them "producing different frequencies when read." It's that CDs are capable of recording and reproducing a broader range of frequencies than vinyl.

That's backwards. You mix, and then master to your format. When you master to vinyl, you inherently lose data because the needle will pop off the track if it's too loud or there's too much bass. You literally don't have to do anything like that when you master for digital. You just make it sound good and you're done.
LPs are really bad at "long term storage".

You can read them without damaging them slightly. You can't make a perfect copy, so when the vinyl detoriates, you will not be able to "make a fresh copy".

CDs can be copied perfectly and can be moved to superior tech, e.g. SSD. You can continue copying a digital version for the next 1000 years without any loss.

Depth? You mean like a large range in available amplitudes (loud vs soft)?
Probably, and they're wrong.
Hope you aren't playing those records on un-conditioned cables.
No DRM and the fact that you actually own it is a big plus.
Like a CD?
Or an mp3, ogg, wav, flac
Fuck no. Vinyl is inferior to modern digital media in every single measurable way. I cannot believe this myth won't fucking die! You literally have to roll off the low end in a vinyl master so the needle doesn't pop off the track ffs. Not to mention the vinyl literally wears down every time you play the record.