For those who use CDs for music, which writable CD type do you use, and why?

Main differences:

  • CD-R can only be written once
  • CD-RW is more expensive
      • I’m sincerely curious: why?

        Hipsters claim vinyl sounds better than digital, despite a complete lack of evidence, but at least there’s a measurable difference between analog and digital, if only in the additional dirty noise produced by the hardware. With CDs, though… digital is digital. There’s literally no difference between a wav and a CD; in fact, you can get more bits in a flac recording if it’s recorded right, which would only be degraded by recording to a CD.

        So, is it the form factor? Some tactile benefit? Or you like the mandatory ritual of switching out CDs every 60 minutes? Why do you like CDs… because it isn’t for the sound.

      • Laser@feddit.de
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        10 months ago

        I think they’re a great format to buy, but nowadays not that great to use. They offer the best audio quality of all physical media (fight me, vinyl enthusiasts), are really easy to handle (on par with cassettes), offers track selection (later cassette decks could detect silence but this doesn’t work for gapless tracks), the equipment is rather cheap nowadays, it’s a digital format without DRM… red book CD might be the best consumer media industry has ever created, my only gripe in the modern world is that its sampling rate is a bit off today’s 48kHz.

        However, I only rip the CDs to lossless and then rarely take them out of my cupboard anymore, don’t even have a CD player. Using CDs in a mobile setting is a whole different beast, it requires a buffer and can also damage the discs in the worst case. But at home, pressed CDs live very long without any degradation in sounds quality, regardless of use. And ironically, buying them is often cheaper than buying non-physical only, though it often means that you end up with tracks you don’t want. But that’s an issue all physical media has.

  • NickwithaC@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    In 2008? CD-R, they’re cheap and you aren’t going to change the songs on the disc rather than just burn a new disc entirely.

    In 2024? micro SDXC card in my phone.

      • Lemonparty@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        Pretty sure it’s easier to find a phone with a mini SD slot than a phone with a CD player.

      • jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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        10 months ago

        Mid range Samsungs and pretty much everything that’s not made by either Apple, Google, or Samsung still has it. We are just in the ridiculous situation that the more expensive the phone the less functionality it has.

      • ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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        10 months ago

        My note 20 Ultra will keep getting used until there is, damn it.

        The next Asus Rog phone is coming out pretty soon, I think. Guessing it will have one, but don’t know how many cell networks it will end up fully working on.

        *Nevermind the rog. It seems none of their phones have had an SD card slot. Lame

  • Chainweasel@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    CD-R has a much wider range of compatibility than CD-RW, so if you’re looking to play music you’ll probably want to go with CD-R.
    And as for data, I wouldn’t use a CD at all. Optical Media is absolute shit for data preservation and those early claims of lasting thousands of years are highly exaggerated, the backing on the CDs (and DVDs) lasts for a few decades at most.
    If you insist on optical data backups you’ll want archival grade discs that are made of glass instead of plastic and don’t use glue on foil for the backing but even those are projected to last hundreds of years at most, and they’re not cheap.

    • baconsanga@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Wow I did not know this. I was going to back up some photos onto CD-R as an extra safeguard. I have it backed up on a hard drive and cloud currently but wanted another back up. Will look into something else now.

      • KickMeElmo@sopuli.xyz
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        10 months ago

        M-Discs will do the trick for a couple centuries, which should exceed the span in which the data needs to be stored. Requires a burner that can handle the discs though.

        • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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          10 months ago

          What good are discs that last a couple of centuries when optical drives have already pretty much died out by this decade?

          • KickMeElmo@sopuli.xyz
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            10 months ago

            That “pretty much” is doing a lot of lifting. They’re not commonplace in laptops now, but industrially they’re still quite common. Same is true of tape backups, which the average consumer would swear is dead tech. If you want to store your files perpetually on disc, you’ll be able to get a reader for that disc easily enough 50+ years from now. It just may not be installed by default.

            • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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              10 months ago

              CD technology isn’t even 50 years old at this point. Making such confident predictions about its availability in 50+ years is ridiculous.

              • The Barto@sh.itjust.works
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                10 months ago

                Considering we still have vinyl players and that techs over 50 years old, it’s not too far of a stretch to believe cd tech will still be around in another 50 years.

                • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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                  10 months ago

                  Vinyl mainly still exists because it is the one lasting technology that is analog music recording technology. CD on the other hand is the first technology of the digital age there when it comes to music. It has no real benefits or distinguishing features over other digital storage (of music or data) to keep it alive.

    • lseif@sopuli.xyzOP
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      10 months ago

      i get it, but for me personally, its just so convenient to just get in the car and something is already set up and playing.

  • Wage_slave@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    Won’t lie, for a short period I had a Sony mini disk set up and I don’t think I can ever appreciate other modern physical mediums of music as much.

    And I can’t explain why other than personal biast reasons, either.

  • SagXD@lemy.lol
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    10 months ago

    I hate being GenZ I don’t even know yet there’s more than one type of CD

    • spongebue@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      CD: the kind you buy from a store with content already on it. Mass-produced with methods and equipment not available in the consumer electronics market, because it was never really necessary. Also includes CD-ROM (Read Only Memory) for data/files read by a computer instead of music alone

      CD-R (Recordable): can be written (“burned”) once and only once. As mentioned in another comment, it may deteriorate over time because of how the disc gets written, but by the time that happens you’ll probably forget you had that disc

      CD-RW (ReWriteable): Can be written like a CD-R, but you can also erase it and write on it again. More expensive, and I believe some readers had trouble with it, but in a world where data storage was expensive and small this was still a useful thing to have

      DVDs had a similar thing, except there were variants where the - was a +, eg DVD+R and DVD+RW. I can’t remember the difference there, but it was pretty trivial. There was also a relatively obscure DVD-RAM that had random access memory. That was pretty cool as well, kind of an alternative to DVR that wasn’t a VHS tape. No need to lose everything you had if you wanted to add more to it

      • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        The difference between DVD-R and DVD+R is how tracking/timing metadata is encoded on the disc. As manufactured, the disc isn’t entirely “blank,” it’s got tracks for the laser to follow already on it, which include timing marks to help the drive track and index the data. -R and +R discs use different techniques for doing this, almost entirely because Sony just can’t handle anything that isn’t their own in-house proprietary shit.

        This didn’t effect playback. Once the disc was burned, that metadata was still there but an ordinary DVD-ROM drive (or DVD movie player) wouldn’t even look for it, for playback, it looks like any other disc. It was only an issue for recording, and as a user you had to know which your DVD burner was capable of using so you could buy the correct discs. Eventually DVD burners were built to handle both, and today unless you have some vintage equipment it’s a non-issue.

    • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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      10 months ago

      I’m a mid-to-older millennial. My elders would say shit like “What? You don’t know how to use a gramophone? You young whippersnappers are completely worthless.” And I find that behavior absolutely abhorrent.

      If you were here in person, I’d offer to spend some time burning some CDs. I’ve still got a computer with some pretty decent optical drives laying around. I can probably even scare up some blank discs. We’d find some music, burn it to a disc and then try it out on my old boom box.

      • spongebue@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        As long as you gave them the full experience with tossing a disc in the trash because of a buffer overrun. Damn Nero software!

        • squeakycat@lemmy.ml
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          10 months ago

          And weird bugs like Windows audio somehow creeping into audio CD burns. Or the times in Linux where the tray would refuse to open or close. I used to keep a paper clip next to my next to force it open sometimes…

          I don’t miss that hardware.

          • Captain Aggravated@sh.itjust.works
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            10 months ago

            I had pretty good luck burning discs, they would occasionally fail.

            I had a CD-RW I used for my mp3 player, and the software I used (Roxio) had this mode where you could treat the disc like any other mass storage device, you could add a single file.

            For our young friend SagXD, burning a CD usually had to be done as a whole. You’d arrange all the files (if a data disc) or audio tracks (if an audio disc) in a buffer, and then burn the entire disc in one shot. If done at “1x” speed, it could take an hour, but “8x” speeds were pretty common, if more error prone. With my rewritable CD, I could add a single file if I wanted to and not have to rewrite the entire disc. Adding a single song to the iPod I got in college wasn’t much less rigamarole.

    • squeakycat@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      Don’t hate it! You were just born in a different time. Your time will come where you have to explain to the young ones about how “smart phones” worked since they’ll just have their implants as interfaces. And also jetpacks.

      • the_third@feddit.de
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        10 months ago

        “Yeah, you always had to pick it out of your pocket first and you actually had to put it down to wipe. I don’t know how we coped either.”

  • kava@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    CD-RW is superior. It’s more expensive but you could use it as many times as you need. So if you were for example a 13 year old who loved to distro hop Linux distributions… it’s very useful to be able to rewrite whatever you were doing.

    The price difference is quickly made up for with the re-usability factor.

    Although I don’t understand why anyone would burn a CD anymore. You can buy flash drives with a ton of storage for really cheap these days. You have all sorts of cloud options. You can even rent your own VPS for less than $5 a month.

    • SteakRipums@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      Although they are supposed to be forever rewritable I could only ever get quality brand RWs to do 3 to 5 rewrites before burns would fail verification. Source: lots of data migration between servers where USB sticks and networking was restricted.

      • kava@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        i think a lot of it depended on your cd burner. i’ve had differing amounts of success with different burners.

        still though, the price was not 3-5x higher if i remember correctly

    • lordmauve@programming.dev
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      10 months ago

      The price difference is quickly made up for with the re-usability factor.

      I don’t think that’s true, CD-Rs cost pennies. You have to rewrite every CD-RW 4 or 5 times before it’s comparable in price. In practice, across every CD-RW ever made, the approximate number of times it is written is probably about 0.5

    • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      10 months ago

      My 02 Toyota Camry doesn’t have a USB slot and I don’t feel like changing head units unless I’m wiring in subs, CDs and tapes still run. Also surprisingly the 02 Toyota Camry doesn’t integrate with Nextcloud so no cloud service for my car.

      • kava@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        there’s all sorts of options there too if you have an old car

        for example there are those CD -> aux or CD -> bluetooth convertors so you can play music off your phone

        but i guess if you do have an old car sometimes it can be nostalgic to put in some CDs. i remember having a belt of CDs on my sun visor. so i get it

        • ArcaneSlime@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          10 months ago

          Never seen a CD version, just a tape version. But yeah honestly fuck it, burning CDs works fine and always has, if it ain’t broke don’t fix it! I don’t have the visor one I just have the giant fake leather binder haha.

  • Paragone@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    CD-R is written in an organic-dye, which deteriorates ( I’ve read the AZO chemistry is more enduring )

    CD-RW is written in the crystallization of a metal layer.

    CD-RW is permanent record, unless you heat them, or blank them, or overwrite/rewrite them: chemical-deterioration isn’t a problem.

    I learned this with backups, many many years ago.

    I’ve no idea if DVD-RW discs also are recorded in a eutectic metal layer, but they’ve multiple record-layers ( 2? ), and I’m don’t know how you can make a eutectic-metal layer that is transparent-enough to get through/past it to write the next layer,

    so I’ve no idea how permanent DVD-RW’s are.

    I’ve lost data on the -R technology.

    I’ve never lost data on the CD-RW technology.

    • Thisfox@sopuli.xyz
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      10 months ago

      I have, incidentally. Not on purpose: My father rearranged a room whilst I was away, putting the entire disc collection on the north-west-facing wall of the house. Bookcase heated and cooked the lot in the afternoon summer sun that January. He was upset when I explained why nothing worked any more.

  • invertedspear@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    In the thick of the cd era I tried to use RW and there wasn’t much rewritable about them. Any attempt to change the data, even to just add a new track, turned the disk into a coaster. Better to stick to CD-R and just burn a whole new disk each update.

    • Dr. Wesker@lemmy.sdf.org
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      10 months ago

      Okay, so I somehow missed the whole minidisc era. I imagine probably because it was shortlived, or just impractical for me at the time. However I find them incredibly fascinating, especially portable minidisc players. I’ve low key been on the lookout for one while thrifting, so I have an excuse to dive in.

      • gregorum@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        they were super-cool, and, yeah, it was very short-lived. i had a net-MD player, a small, portable MD player that ran on a single AA battery and lasted ages. it could also record on-device and also played mp3s. i loved that fucking thing!

        MDs were better than CD-RWs because they were 1/2 the size and came in a case while being almost skip-proof.

    • Shadow@lemmy.ca
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      10 months ago

      If you still have any minidiscs around, glue a couple magnets on the back and they make a great retro fridge magnet.

    • Nusm@yall.theatl.social
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      10 months ago

      Worked in radio for a number of years, and we used mini disks to record phone calls for a while. Still have a number of them knocking around a storage box somewhere.

    • guyrocket@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      I did not have any miniDiscs but I did have a SuperDisk in a PC I built which was a complete waste of time and money.

      The SuperDisk was a waste. Not my whole PC.

      • gregorum@lemm.ee
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        10 months ago

        oh, i remember those. they were like a super-Zip disk right in the era when usb flash drives and early sd cards and CD-Rs and -RWs were just becoming a thing.

        i remember they never took off because nobody could quite figure out what to use them for since there were several other overlapping storage media that were emergent at the time which were better suited to their needs (and cheaper).

      • r00ty@kbin.life
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        10 months ago

        I had an IOMega ZIP (the original 100MB one) back in the 90s, connected to my Amiga 1200. Those were definitely not a waste when they first came out. I used to run a BBS back then, and had a drive crash and yeah backup wasn’t quite so easy or affordable back then. So I had to rebuild my file library.

        I went to a local fellow Sysop with a few zip disks and had a file library back up and running in no time.

    • Archer@lemmy.world
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      10 months ago

      R if you want rock solid reliability and compatibility, RW if the device supports it

  • BananaOnionJuice@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    10 months ago

    I used CD-RW and re-wrote them a bit 25 years ago when the price of a CD-R was high, and a CD-RW cost like 2-3x of a CD-R, when the prices dropped it stopped making sense.

    Last time I burned a CD/DVD was 10-15 years ago.

  • Donebrach@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    just curious why anyone would bother using a CD—its a digital medium so playing a CD vs just playing a .wav file off your computer or phone is literally the exact same audio quality (unless the cd is damaged and you get skipping which is not optimal…). You can connect speakers to a computer. it is literally the exact same thing. I understand people liking ANALOG media (vinyl or [for some unknown reason] tape cassette) but what is the point of using an out dated, flimsy and easily destructible DIGITAL storage?