Farewell to the Phillips Cassette
Jul. 24th, 2003 12:11 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
I used to use the other formats too - not just the 8 track of legend, but the other competing formats that were all out there when tape was new. Other formats that died out quickly included 4-track and "playtape". All but the Phillips cassette were endless loop type cartridges, and all faded out quickly except the 8-track which took a little bit longer.
And now, as far as we are concerned, the Audio tape is completely history.
Neither the home stereo nor any of the 3 vehicles we have contain a cassette player anymore. All are straight CD. The cars can also play MP3 music as well, which is a big plus. The van got it's CD player years ago and so can only play regular audio disks, but we seldom use it so that's ok.
Thanks to my ripflash 2 from pogoproducts, I am now converting all of the aging cassette tapes we have to MP3's so they can be put in the new format, which is also incidentally a lot more resistant to heat damage. I can also put two weeks worth of Howard Stern on a single CD, so
martes can now have all the Howard she could ever want.
And now, as far as we are concerned, the Audio tape is completely history.
Neither the home stereo nor any of the 3 vehicles we have contain a cassette player anymore. All are straight CD. The cars can also play MP3 music as well, which is a big plus. The van got it's CD player years ago and so can only play regular audio disks, but we seldom use it so that's ok.
Thanks to my ripflash 2 from pogoproducts, I am now converting all of the aging cassette tapes we have to MP3's so they can be put in the new format, which is also incidentally a lot more resistant to heat damage. I can also put two weeks worth of Howard Stern on a single CD, so
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