Triphibian 4 minutes ago

Spotty coverage on the mountain drive to my house so I use CDs. I've started burning copies of CDs because the washboard bumps on the dirt roads scratch the discs up pretty quick. Sirius XM works great too.

  • Triphibian 3 minutes ago

    Also: CD prices at thrift stores top out at 3 bucks. The local library thrift sells them for a quarter each!

hateful 15 minutes ago

My phone NEVER connects properly and if I want to use it for streaming, I have to spend 2-3 minutes connecting it every time. This has always been the case. Past 3 cards, past 6 phones.

Now-a-days I load up a small flash drive for the car with a small sampling of what I want to listen to. I have another one at home and "Swap" them from time to time with new things. That way it's not overloaded, doesn't take 2 minutes to load up. So it's very much like a mix CD or the mp3 CDs I would burn a couple of decades ago.

  • philistine 13 minutes ago

    Wired CarPlay is rock solid. Bluetooth has never, and never, will be as foolproof as a wire, or as Wi-Fi for that matter.

RiverCrochet 2 hours ago

> The only real case for what is soon to be lost, I think, is that of a limited selection of music in the car forcing you to spend time with it, forging deep and often weird attachments

Honestly that's the whole article, lol.

My thoughts: Nowadays we may have deep and weird attachments with algorithms.

I don't know if this is a bad or honestly even a new thing. The music industry and its attempt to market music could be considered a type of algorithm, or even multiple algorithms. Defining and marketing genres of music "algorithmizes" the product I think - if genre X sells, then more musicians will try to call their music genre X and maybe even modify their product.

And people who grew up in the physical medium heydays of the 60s through the mid 90s are definitely attached to their preferences.

  • HKH2 an hour ago

    Well, familiarity breeds contempt, so to have exotic things, you need to dance the line between what is plain and what is too strange to make sense of. An algorithm should do that for you.

    An algorithm with your playlist history along with others' should provide decent recommendations. Spotify used to let you dislike things and it worked really well, but then they stopped doing that and my recommendations became generic garbage.

    • chucksmash 24 minutes ago

      Agreed on Spotify recommendations. I felt like the playlists I got from Spotify circa 2017 did a really good job of walking that line. Nowadays the "song radio" and "artist radio" playlists are bad. Definitely a step back. There are bands I still like that I've added to "Never play music from this artist" because Spotify puts them on every single playlist for me now.

  • bigstrat2003 an hour ago

    > Honestly that's the whole article, lol.

    To be fair the story about taunting her brother with Champagne Supernova when he needed to pee was pretty funny. But yeah, there's not a lot of meat there.

garciansmith an hour ago

I mostly used MiniDiscs in the late '90s and early 2000s (it was tape adapters and then aux cables for me), and I kind of always hated CDs since they could so easily be scratched, especially in a car.

But I do really miss long road trips for which my friends would burn specific mixes on CD. There was something nice about hearing their carefully selected tracks meant to embody the mood of the journey.

  • kevin_thibedeau 10 minutes ago

    You can burn a USB stick with selected tracks meant to embody the mood of the journey.

thx an hour ago

i <33 mi CDs , especially in z car

shwaj 2 hours ago

“… when I sit in the driver’s seat – categorically the best place to listen to music alone“

:eye-roll: I suppose, if you don’t mind road noise. Can’t stand this overwrought writing style.

  • idiotsecant 29 minutes ago

    There is something special for me about listening to a certain song late at night speeding on a damp muggy highway when the world is empty but somehow menacing, with nothing in the whole universe other than me and the crickets and the electric promise of a coming dawn full of opportunity.

    For some subset of the last generation of american youth (and maybe this one? I am too hopelessly old to know now) the personal automobile had a kind of almost shamanic importance and the CD collection was a not insignificant part of that.

    The 'best' music is not the music that is most accurately rendered. It is music in the time and place where it most properly induces the distilled current of its meaning into your soul in a way that you feel its echos 30 years later.

    For some people, that is in fact in a car.

  • codefeenix an hour ago

    maybe not categorically, but potentially the best place for that person.