I keep about 100 in my studio, and another 5-600 in storage. I wont ever part with them, even if I never play them again.
iLLnaDa
quote:
Originally posted by smuncky
johan gielens house
gangstaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa :p
hahah he's missing some bling on his wheels :haha: :haha:
Espresso
looks like Sven Vath has adopted "minimal" as a lifestyle. :p
RobSt*r
Danny Tenaglia has got all these guys beat with his pad.
phlog
quote:
Originally posted by Jayx1
I LOL @ how anti vinyl some noobs are.... hahaha
says the guy who keeps vinyl because he thinks his computer might spontaneously combust.
if you were referring to me, I'm not anti-vinyl. I see the value, I just can't justify holding on to something I'd never use. Just my opinion.
phlog
quote:
Originally posted by RobSt*r
Danny Tenaglia has got all these guys beat with his pad.
wikkid
Orko
quote:
Originally posted by RobSt*r
Danny Tenaglia has got all these guys beat with his pad.
The picture of himself in his own studio is creepy. Otherwise its an awesome space.
quote:
Originally posted by Jayx1
or as im willing to bet, they still use vinyl for sampling and or "storage" since electronic copies are subject to self destruct at any time. At least thats why i still have vinyl :)
The right magnetic storage has an archive life of 40-60 years. That's why they are used for archiving.
Burned cd: 5-10 years.
Pressed CD's: 20 years.
Tape: 40-60 years.
Hard drive: depends on how much it is used.
Vinyl: not the same because the physical disc lasts, but it degrades in quality. Subject to warping, wearing out..etc.
ChemEnhanced
quote:
Originally posted by Espresso
looks like Sven Vath has adopted "minimal" as a lifestyle. :p
:stongue: :stongue: :stongue: :stongue:
now that is some funny right there
ChemEnhanced
DJ Shaya's room
DeleteFromUsers
quote:
Originally posted by Orko
Tape: 40-60 years.
Do you have a source for this? The only article I found which stated a time was by the National Media Lab. They specify 10-30 years for a tape.
Tapes are great for archives, but how long do you want to spend trying to extract one track from a magnetic tape?
Using RAID you can have virtually instant access to any of your tracks, and they are fully backed up in the event of a drive failure (or even multiple simultaneous drive failures) - hot swappable even.
WittyHandle
quote:
Originally posted by Orko
The picture of himself in his own studio is creepy. Otherwise its an awesome space.
Glad I'm not the only one who thinks so. I saw he put up on Facebook a while ago that he was trying to sell this space. Might have by now, but I couldn't tell you because I had to hide him from my feed due to his annoying self-absorbed posts and constant need for attention.