• Kimjongtooill@sh.itjust.works
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    1 month ago

    “We used to mark them ‘summer mix’ and put them in a soft case full of them in the car, which was the style at the time”

  • bandwidthcrisis@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I made some DVDs for someone recently. First I had to dig out my old laptop that has a drive. Then install authoring and burning software.

    All the help forum posts that I found were at least 15 years old, I’m amazed that any of the recommended software still existed.

    I found that I still had two plastic tubes of DVD+Rs!

    • kamen@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      Funny to think that the same number of drives would fit into maybe 1/4 of this height if made in the slim form factor.

  • kamen@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Not having lived through it is fine; being unable to google a couple of words is just virtue signalling how lazy you are, especially considering this is probably coming from someone who’s glued to their phone all day.

  • Gerowen@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I’m a school bus driver and I’m not even joking when I say I blew my kids’ minds with a burned CD the other day. My daughter asked me to make one of the KPop Demon Hunters soundtrack. One kid asked how I got it on CD and when I showed him a burned disc complete with sharpie label his response was just, “Wait you can do that?!”

    Made me feel old as hell.

  • SCmSTR@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 month ago

    Cds are digital data storage discs that are etched in microscopic 1’s and 0’s in a microscopic spiral with a laser, and then later read back with lasers. You can only write them once but you can read them a million times. So grammatically, in the same way you “nuke” food in a microwave, you “burn” a cd in a cd drive that is capable of writing cds.

    Maybe someday we can have cheap (cheaper than other storage media per gb), durable (last at least my lifetime), terabyte, fast read optical media. I would love to permanently store lots of stuff that doesn’t ever need to be rewritten.

    • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      There’s a Bluray media called MDisc that’s supposed to be more durable. It says 1000 years so I give it 100 based on the fact that the 100 year rated Verbatim AZZO DVD+R’s that I burned and verified to have low PIO errors had errors after 10 years stored in black cases in my temperature controlled basement.

      People claim their burned DVD’s are all fine but I’ve never heard a post back when I asked if they’ve actually verified all the bits. “It reads when I put it in.” doesn’t mean there isn’t data corruption.

      • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I recently learned of MDisc (there’s a CD and DVD version, too, iirc) and decided to get a burner and convert my old data CDs.

        While I haven’t verified every single bit, I did check that the files copied off of it were still functional and didn’t see any issues. Also didn’t get any errors. I was surprised because I’ve had some of them for over 20 years now and didn’t do more than put them in CD binders to protect them (during the days when I didn’t even consider the longevity of the media, other then obvious things like scratches.

        Only disc I wasn’t able to get the data from was a packet CD, which was a special format that facilitated treating the disc more like diskettes, where you could read or write at will via the filesystem rather than writing the disc as a special package from the start (or having multiple sessions if there’s still room on the disc after one such write). I was able to find references to the tech, though not if it was a standard or just a name a few different companies used for different implementations, but I wasn’t able to find Linux drivers that could do anything other than rip the ISO and a few strings or tell me it can’t find anything. Though it’s possible that corruption is really what happened here because I’d expect RW CDs to last a shorter time than the write once ones.

        Though I suppose I could try it on my old windows machine and see if drivers are more readily available there.

          • Buddahriffic@lemmy.world
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            1 month ago

            Yeah, those were CDs. I don’t think I got to the DVDs, since my sense of urgency faded after I saw the older ones seemed ok. I’ll have to check them out after you said that, though lol.

  • ZkhqrD5o@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Low effort joke

    When I was your age, we used to own our music. It worked offline and we could copy it to other devices.

    Tangent

    Why aren’t Normies speaking up about everything needing internet? Street navigation, music, videos, reading, games, etc. Are all things that would work brilliantly normally, no server required. Why does no one realise, that if the server disappears, so does in effect their personal property? If it is tethered to a server, it’s broken, because the server will disappear, the question is only when.

    • bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      Normies dont understand the abstraction layer between all their data being stored in offline data banks and being mined for illegal ai use and surveillance.

      Ill keep my physical media thanks. Never was on the cloud bandwagon, I wont be on the ai bandwagon.

    • yermaw@sh.itjust.works
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      1 month ago

      why aren’t normies speaking up

      They dont care. Speaking as a normie-convert, so long as it works right now idgaf. When it doesn’t work tomorrow I’ll cry about it then and demand to speak to the manager, but right now? Summer will last forever.

    • moseschrute@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      I told my dad I want cassette tapes to come back. He laughed and said how he remembered how crystal clear CDs were when he listened to them for the first time. What can I say dad, I like a little wow/flutter in my music.

  • Lootboblin@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Back in the day here in Finland we ordered bulk of cd/dvd r and rw’s from Åland Islands (autonomous region of Finland). They were cheaper thanks to taxes loophole. I still had 20 pcs of dvd’s from those days and burned them all to save some space on my pc.

  • stupidcasey@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    A CD is a Certificate of Deposit. You see, back in the 1900s, our parents had this thing called DISPOSABLE INCOME thought to be a myth, but trust me, it was real. People had so much money they wouldn’t starve to death if they didn’t work overtime.

    Anyway, they needed a place to put it, so get this: they could deposit it into an account, and it would actually grow! Then they’d get a Certificate of Deposit to verify they really gave the bank the money because—guess what—it wasn’t a scam! They got the money back! I know, right? Amazing.