VOGONS


The Death of Minidisc

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First post, by snorg

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As cool as it is to have your entire (or close to) music collection on your phone, I do miss the days of Minidisc and don't think it got a fair shake in the US.

I always thought Minidisc would have been the perfect replacement for the 3.5" floppy. If Sony hadn't been so zealous with copy protection hassles, it probably would have stalled the complete takeover of the music industry by Apple.

These days, I usually stream music over my phone. But every so often I get the itch to make a good old fashioned mix "tape" via minidisc.

Anyone else feel the same?

Can you still get player/recorders and blanks online anywhere? Other than Fleabay?
Anyone on Vogons still use the humble minidisc? Any suggestions for alternatives to the Sony software?

Reply 1 of 12, by BloodyCactus

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I loved my sharp minidisc player/recorder. LP2 was good mix of size/compression. I lusted for ages over the minidisc disk drive you could put in your pc and use minidiscs as mini disks 🤣. my mate had a bookshelf minidisc player, that was really sweet. could play a cd and record to md all in the one bookshelf unit.

--/\-[ Stu : Bloody Cactus :: [ https://bloodycactus.com :: http://kråketær.com ]-/\--

Reply 2 of 12, by xjas

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My car has a minidisc player (Japanese import so of course it does. 😉 ) I've never found a single minidisc for it or even seen one advertised in the local classifieds. It also has a 10-disc CD changer in the boot and a 3.5mm input so I don't really see any reason to bother. Cool tech though.

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Reply 3 of 12, by PeterLI

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Last edited by PeterLI on 2016-12-16, 16:26. Edited 1 time in total.

Reply 4 of 12, by brassicGamer

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I'm totally with you. I got my first MD unit in '98, a portable model that i still have, specifically to record mixes onto as an upgrade from cassette. As a result i have never owned a CD Walkman. The Sony software was absolutely gash in my opinion but the SB Live! came with an awesome piece of software called Minidisc Centre that allowed me to record mixes and CDs to MD via optical out, including track breaks. I would record an entire mix into Cool Edit and chop it up beforehand.

I worked in a computer store at the time and my manager was also a DJ. Head office used to send down a Minidisc with their 'radio station' on it. Of course we never played that and instead played out our mixes instead!

The next portable music device i bought was a SmartMedia device and the rest is history but, just last month, I built an XP system with an SB Live! installed so i could mess about with it again.

I also craved the disk drive and the closest i got was when I bought what i thought was a superior player with a USB connection, thinking i could transfer music in something other than real-time. But no. It was crappy USB sound card! Took it back the very next day.

Check out my blog and YouTube channel for thoughts, articles, system profiles, and tips.

Reply 5 of 12, by brassicGamer

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PeterLI wrote:

Nope. I do not care about music. I like LaserDisc though.

And, er, where's your portable Laserdisc player? 😉

Check out my blog and YouTube channel for thoughts, articles, system profiles, and tips.

Reply 6 of 12, by psychz

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MiniDiscs, here in Greece, were common among teenagers in the very late 90s-early 2000s. When greek-made "uplifting trance" music (in fact MadTracker module music) was in fashion, they used them to make compilations, trade unreleased tracks, even record live sets straight from the mixer, by splitting the output! Shortly afterwards, mid-2000s, portable MP3 players and the cheesy full-on psytrance craze had both replaced their ancestors...

Stojke wrote:

Its not like components found in trash after 20 years in rain dont still work flawlessly.

:: chemical reaction :: athens in love || reality is absent || spectrality || meteoron || the lie you believe

Reply 7 of 12, by PeterLI

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Last edited by PeterLI on 2016-12-16, 16:26. Edited 1 time in total.

Reply 8 of 12, by Unknown_K

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I was going to buy one when they were new in the store (kept looking at them at BestBuy) but changed my mind. At the time my Alpine CD deck in my car could read CDR so I just made CDs. Also a 100 CD changer was more practical.

The only gear of that era I bothered getting later on was a Panasonic DAT player/recorder (couldn't find the Technics version but close enough). I still want a high end 3 head fully motorized tape deck for my old metal tapes.

Collector of old computers, hardware, and software

Reply 9 of 12, by luckybob

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The recordable cd to the masses is what I went with. Friend had a minidisc. I sold literally 100's of bootleg cd's and games while in highschool. Paid for a whole new system. ^.^ Then the whole mp3 on a CD was the best thing EVER. suddenly I had 100 of my songs at my fingertips.

It is a mistake to think you can solve any major problems just with potatoes.

Reply 10 of 12, by tayyare

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I still have my Yamaha dual cassette deck in working condition and more than a hundred "cassettes" (from 1985-1996). 🤣

Still listen them from time to time, but unfortunately, their quality is degrading over time, as expected.

GA-6VTXE PIII 1.4+512MB
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Reply 11 of 12, by NJRoadfan

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I almost purchased a MiniDisc recorder and portable unit when Sony did a combo offer on the units back in 1999ish. Right around the time I landed up with a CD-R drive and just started burning CDs as the blanks had just crashed in price. I later got one of those horribly executed MP3 CD players for the car. To its credit, it still works!

On a side note, tapes were still popular in Spain in the late 90s. A friend had an exchange student that specifically requested mix tapes even though sending him CD-Rs were cheap.

psychz wrote:

MiniDiscs, here in Greece, were common among teenagers in the very late 90s-early 2000s. When greek-made "uplifting trance" music (in fact MadTracker module music) was in fashion, they used them to make compilations, trade unreleased tracks, even record live sets straight from the mixer, by splitting the output! Shortly afterwards, mid-2000s, portable MP3 players and the cheesy full-on psytrance craze had both replaced their ancestors...

Hey, I happen to like all that stuff. Nowadays they all play that stupid big room crap.

Reply 12 of 12, by psychz

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NJRoadfan wrote:

Hey, I happen to like all that stuff. Nowadays they all play that stupid big room crap.

Me too, in fact it's what I do in my spare time when not fooling around with retro rigs <shameless plug> 😉

Stojke wrote:

Its not like components found in trash after 20 years in rain dont still work flawlessly.

:: chemical reaction :: athens in love || reality is absent || spectrality || meteoron || the lie you believe