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DistortedAudio wrote:Gildermershina wrote:I tend to buy CDs because I still like the idea of music as a physical object. It occurs to me that this is impractical, because my collection is split between my parents house and my glasgow flat, and until I get somewhere more permanent to live, it's kind of a pain in the ass. So I rip everything - but even that has its issues, as I am now a dual mac and PC user (my swanky new desktop in glasgow is PC, my macbook is for everything else). I have some 7" vinyls, four limited edition Secret Chiefs 3 releases, but otherwise it's all CD. I've got three Ikea Benno towers full in Perth, and one full in glasgow, with another half-tower's worth piled up in my bedroom waiting for somewhere to go...
Increasingly though, I'm beginning to see the problem of having everything physical. I've already given up on games being physical objects, and to be quite honest I wouldn't mind giving up on DVDs and the like and settling for some UK version of Netflix. Yet still I cling to the CDs. At this point I don't even know if it's just because I'm so invested in the idea that I can't let it go, or if I really do want some kind of a collection, like a library. I do rather like the idea of a physical music library, where only you know exactly where everything is, and you have to climb up ladders and pull things out, and blow the dust off the covers, but we're talking about CDs here, not vinyl. It's not really the same is it? I find this problem with books and games. I don't know why, but with books(I'm a huge bookworm, wanting to be a writer when I get the chance) nothing beats that feeling of actually physically flipping the pages. With games, I don't know why but when ever I try to pirate them or buy them online even it hurts me a bit. I guess it's because I'm a console gamer at heart. Well I'm fully converted to Kindle now, because I hadn't really read much in the way of paper books for years. I still love magazines though, got the last three or four years of Edge on a couple shelves. With games, at least on PC, I am fully on board with Steam. Anything that's not on Steam seems like a hassle now. It's ridiculous. Oh, speaking of which, anybody want a free copy of Portal on Steam? Got it in my Portal 2 pre-order and I obviously had Portal already. Beyond having to use Steam, there are no strings attached. It is in fact, a free copy of Portal. Sure, I miss not having comprehensive manuals in games, but those have been going away for years, not just because of digital distribution. But unlike with music, I don't think I would miss boxed games especially. Sometimes limited editions are real nice, but that's a rarity. |