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- Newsgroups: rec.audio
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!rpi!news.columbia.edu!cunixa.cc.columbia.edu!gmw1
- From: gmw1@cunixa.cc.columbia.edu (Gabe M Wiener)
- Subject: Re: questions on new digital formats
- Message-ID: <1992Dec26.020230.21186@news.columbia.edu>
- Sender: usenet@news.columbia.edu (The Network News)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: cunixa.cc.columbia.edu
- Reply-To: gmw1@cunixa.cc.columbia.edu (Gabe M Wiener)
- Organization: Columbia University
- References: <1992Dec23.234533.16495@adobe.com> <28963@oasys.dt.navy.mil> <PHR.92Dec25154056@napa.telebit.com>
- Date: Sat, 26 Dec 1992 02:02:30 GMT
- Lines: 42
-
- In article <PHR.92Dec25154056@napa.telebit.com> phr@telebit.com (Paul Rubin) writes:
- >
- >I have sometimes wondered whether the DAT tape tax is an effort
- >to kill off DAT altogether.
-
- Errr....you can't kill something that was never alive.
-
- DAT has clearly fizzled as a consumer format. It never gained widespread
- acceptance. The machines are too expensive, and most consumers couldn't
- give a damn about digital recording or sound quality.
-
- DAT has soared as the 2-track _professional_ medium of choice. The only
- reason DCC or MD (but not both in my opinion) will make it is if the price
- point drops low enough to make it a realistic alternative to cassettes for
- the audio-brain-dead buying public.
-
- >In some parts of the world, cassettes have been pretty much the only
- >medium in use for over a decade (very little vinyl or CD's, even back
- >when vinyl was the dominant medium here). Even in the US, I believe
- >ACC, not CD, is still the "dominant" distribution medium.
-
- In places like India, cassettes are more or less the _only_ media used,
- especially in rural parts of the country.
-
- In the US, the Compact Disc is surely dominant. Many record firms are
- not even producing pre-recorded cassettes of anything but the major
- releases.
- >I'd also like to see MD's (which store 128 megabytes
- >of digital data) replace floppy discs (i.e. drive cost < $100, blank
- >disk cost <$2) but I'm not holding my breath.
-
- Well, I'm hopeful that if anything, this impending marketing war will
- force the price of MO technology down low enough that it becomes a
- cost-effective alternative to magnetic media and replaces the floppy
- disk. A good riddance that would be.
-
-
- --
- Gabe Wiener - Columbia Univ. "This 'telephone' has too many shortcomings
- gmw1@cunixa.cc.columbia.edu to be seriously considered as a means of
- N2GPZ in ham radio circles communication. The device is inherently of
- 72355,1226 on CI$ no value to us." -Western Union memo, 1877
-