Cassette Tapes On The Wane 339
jonerik writes "The BBC has an article on the current status of the once-popular cassette tape in the UK and elsewhere. It's been a long climb up and a long fall down for the audio format introduced by Dutch electronics giant Philips in 1963. Having sold 83 million units in the UK at their 1989 peak, cassettes sold just 900,000 units in the UK last year. And yet the cassette soldiers on in the West in niche applications - particularly in the audio book market - and in other countries where CD and MP3 penetration hasn't been as extensive. From the article: 'Keith Joplin, a Director of Research at the International Federation of Phonographic Industries, said that Turkey still sells 88 million cassettes a year, India 80 million, and that cassettes account for 50% of sales in these countries. In Saudi Arabia, it is 70%.'"
Saudi Cassettes (Score:2, Funny)
And every last one of them begins with "La illaha il Allah".
Re:Saudi Cassettes (Score:2)
TW
Re:Saudi Cassettes (Score:2)
Re:Saudi Cassettes (Score:2)
Re:Don't you mean... (Score:2)
"IT'S A TRAP!"
Haven't used one in a LONG time... (Score:3)
Re:Haven't used one in a LONG time... (Score:2)
I've been using P2P to download replacements, but that apparently is evil and nasty. I'll probably end replacing some, but there's just way too much money in those tapes for me to go down to the record store and
Re:Haven't used one in a LONG time... (Score:2)
8 Track?
Or maybe you could upgrade to 2113.
old school (Score:2, Interesting)
I hope that anything that out'dos CDs come back to a smaller, more po
Re:old school (Score:2)
I remember when, as a child, I first discovered that tapes magically stuck to the small U magnet I had received as part of a science kit. "Mom, look!" I said as I picked up her new Moody Blues tape off of the coffee table with my magnet that cold Christmas morning. Needless to say, my mom received a replacement tape the next day
Cars and Music Formats (Score:2)
This time around I wanted iPod connectivity, but my new car came standard with a 6 disk changer in the glove box.
How long before CDs and DVDs? (Score:2)
Re:How long before CDs and DVDs? (Score:2)
I could go for smaller discs though.
Same quality, but 1" discs.
I'd worry about losing them though.
Re:How long before CDs and DVDs? (Score:2)
Oh that's too bad (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Oh that's too bad (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Oh that's too bad (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Oh that's too bad (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Oh that's too bad (Score:3, Insightful)
Apparently shoddy cds can shatter at high speeds. I've never seen or heard of it from my friends though.
But anyway, it is almost cunningly smart of these countries to rely on this old proven technologies, and skip technologies that are redundant. Iraq, for example, seems to be skipp
Sum (Score:2, Interesting)
The music industry itself, however, remained concerned about cassettes, in particular the ability of people to record music on them
[2]
However, while cassettes are disappearing quickly from the music stores, they are clinging on in the UK in bookshops
[3]
However, terms such as fast forward, rewind, record and pause, everyday words bequeathed to us from the tape era, ensure that in the English language at least, the legacy of the cassette will survive
Re:Sum (Score:2)
No it isn't, because there's a major difference between analog recordings (especially slightly crappy ones like on bootleg cassette tapes) and digital ones: the sound quality decreases rapidly with each copy-of-a-copy. Which means only professional piracy, from a master tape or CD, is to be feared.
However, terms such as fast forward, rewind, record and pause, everyday words
what about... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:what about... (Score:2)
Next format? (Score:2)
New formats, old formats.
Re:Next format? (Score:2)
Re:Next format? (Score:2)
Re:Next format? (Score:2)
Blanks (Score:2)
Yay! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Yay! (Score:2)
Philips? (Score:2)
Cassettes... (Score:2)
Sure they're not the most high fidelity or durable or anything, but when it comes to just throwing down a quick recording of something, they're perfect, and the sheer number of cars and people with tape players and whatnot guarantees that there will always be a market for them..
and heck, 900,000 units ain't bad...
don't throw out your tape deck yet, that's for sure!
Only a matter of time (Score:2)
It has a very limited life.
The audio qualiy is poor
and it has a very inefficient size and shape
Oh well, RIP cassette tape.
Re:Only a matter of time (Score:2)
The "official" lifespan of a cassette is somewhere between 10-15 years. Though much like a compact disc it's longevity can be promoted through good storage.
Audio quality has a lot to do with the quality of the device that records and plays it.
I would argue that it's size and shape are actually quite efficient, considering that it contains moving parts and a few hundred feet of tape.
Personally, I find casse
Re:Only a matter of time (Score:2)
Storage time, or being used?
I had tapes blow up after the span of just over a year back when I used tapes.
Re:Only a matter of time (Score:2)
Didn't See That One Coming (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Didn't See That One Coming (Score:2)
Re:Didn't See That One Coming (Score:2)
I'm new at this, but... (Score:3, Informative)
In Soviet Russia, cassette tapes you!
Re:I'm new at this, but... (Score:5, Funny)
Since you're new, I'll forgive you. But here are your problems:
1) The previous statement said "Turkey sells 88 million casettes..." Your retort is not parallel. The correct response is, "In Soviet Russia, casette sells you!" or something equivalent.
2) I noticed you're sitting pretty a score of 1. To increase that score, you nowadays can't just make a lame Soviet Russia joke. Throw in those now-popular old people in Korea, perhaps. Maybe write "I know I'll get modded down for thus but..." and then whatever. That's a surefire way to get to 5. Or you could say something that alludes to "In Soviet Russia" without actually writing it. For example, "You know the editors are just baiting us by saying 'In Saudi Arabia...'", except say something funny instead of that.
By the way, I know I'll get modded down for this whole spiel.
Re:I'm new at this, but... (Score:2)
In Saudi Arabia, the camel rides you!
In Saudi Arabia, the sand blows you!
In Saudi Arabia, the dessert eats you!
"That's a surefire way to get to 5."
we shall see, because the jokes sure arent funny enough for a 5.
And yes, spelling errors are intentional
Re:I'm new at this, but... (Score:2)
Not really; that particular paragraph really merits an Insightful...
Re:I'm new at this, but... (Score:2)
Re:I'm new at this, but... (Score:2)
Re:I'm new at this, but... (Score:2)
In other news... (Score:2)
Che Guevara is still dead.
Exactly who thought cassettes had a bright future? Are they speculating in Texas oil companies and Californian gold mines too? Jeez...
Music? (Score:3, Interesting)
I used to use them for mass storage on a TRS-80. And my 4.77 MHz, 16k IBM PC supported cassette storage. Didn't need it though, thanks to the two 5" floppy drives, which stored, I believe, a total of 720k.
Re:Music? (Score:3, Funny)
In one of the biggest forehead slappers ever, the cries of "Wow, how did you do it?" by the older grizzled computer geeks was replied to by:
"I put it in my boom box and dubbed it."
I tried to RTFA... (Score:2)
Guess I'm going to have to buy the white album again...*sigh*
time for computer upgrade (Score:5, Funny)
With the threat of cassette tapes going away, what does this mean for me and my TRS-80? Are there CD Burners for the TRS-80? Help!
Re:time for computer upgrade (Score:2)
Okay, dig this, I have the solution for you:
get one of these so-called "MP3 to cassette" adapters (which are just a generic way to feed sound to a cassette deck from some device with a regular 3.5 audio jack) and feed it your programs on CD.
I have all my ZX-81 programs stored on CD and it works just dandy. MP3'ing them should work too, so you can store your TRS-80 programs on
Re:time for computer upgrade (Score:2)
this may help [google.com]
Back on topic. Good riddance! I'm glad tapes are gone. When CDs first came out, I liked the fidelity of them and that they could play more than 20 minutes before flipping them over, but I didn't like that they did not record.
Even "back in the day", I thought tapes were only useful for making portable (possibly pirated, yes this is not new) recordings of my LPs so they could play in my car or walkman. I always hated tapes because of the lack of indexing songs (no the "listen for a quiet
Cassette product for the future (Score:2, Interesting)
What I don't understand is why nobody makes a cassette that contains a tiny MP3 player and eats a memory stick.
Cool product for all us who a not blessed with the latest and greatest in car-radios and also don't want a portable MP3 player.
Re:Cassette product for the future (Score:2)
Durable (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Durable (Score:2)
Take the plastic thing back to the store and ask for a CD. The DRMed stuff does not count as a real CD and _should_ not purport to be one by using the CD logo.
CDs only last for a few minutes in my grasp until they get scratched up and explode.
Please stay away from my CDs and anything else of value that I own and my workplace. Thanks.
Tape? (Score:2, Funny)
Audio Books (Score:5, Interesting)
So I don't doubt there's been a decline in cassette audio books even--it's obvious at the stores. But I think it's premature, at least for that genre.
Re:Audio Books (Score:2)
Re:Audio Books (Score:2)
Re:Audio Books (Score:2)
Re:Audio Books (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Audio Books (Score:2, Insightful)
Collector's Items? (Score:2)
If you browse around on some music stores, old vinyl records are going for several hundred dollars, whereas a CD of the groups music is priced regularly. Just because they've gone out of style, doesn't mean you should throw away your cassettes. In 50 years who knows how much money they might be worth, espec
Re:Collector's Items? (Score:2)
Re:Collector's Items? (Score:2)
Not that I'd ever consider this, but respect is due for these DJ's who used what was available to them.
The early house DJ's also used to play stuff off reel to reel tapes - in particular the original mix of Phuture's Acid Trax was chewed up in a tape machine, the version you hear now lacks the original voca
whaaaa? (Score:2)
Seriously, is anyone, besides the mentally handicapped, the recently comatose, and Poison [poisonweb.com] fans, reading this headline and going, "Whaaaa, cassette sales are down in the US and UK?", and if so, what are the chances that they know what the word "wane" means?
Re:whaaaa? (Score:3, Insightful)
Unskinny Bop [lyricsfreak.com]
'Nuff said.
the lost art of the mix tape (Score:5, Interesting)
CD's are just too easy, a few minutes on P2P or the iTunes store, and you're done. You kids don't know how good you got it! We had to walk uphill both ways in the snow to get to the tape recorder, and.....
Re:the lost art of the mix tape (Score:2)
Ah... childhood memories...
Those handy-dandy cassettes (Score:2)
I also remember pranks that we used to do to people, like record their snoring at night - just to prove to them that they did - then play it back in front of everyone. Try doing that with a CD.
Or how about recording something, say - a sound. I have a whole side of a ninety minute tape with the sound of the dishwasher running on it. Why, you ask? Because my son, as a baby, would fa
You cannot go tape-dropping without casettes... (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:You cannot go tape-dropping without casettes... (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, I have no idea how long one of those tapes actually is, but it's LONG. The thing was fluttering away for quite a while, building up a huge pile of loose tape on the floor.
All of this got me thinking - what would happen if you tossed one of these out of a plane at 10,000 feet? Would the air resis
Video camera that used audio cassette tape. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Video camera that used audio cassette tape. (Score:5, Informative)
apparently a lot of independant and underground filmmakers were huge fans of the things in the 90's
Re:Video camera that used audio cassette tape. (Score:2)
Audio book thoughts (Score:2)
But look in a bookstore at the audio book section and it's cassette tapes almost all the way. A few CDs are included, but ypu really have to hunt them down. But who use
Cassettes (Score:5, Informative)
They were a lot more durable, too. CDs scratch a lot more easily, and you can't repair them with scotch tape.
Because they were analogue devices, you could play them at variable speed or even in reverse, which meant you could get some really strange effects if you tried. You can't really do that with a physical digital system, you'd have to read the information into RAM and then vary the sample speed.
CDs and DVDs decay rapidly in UV light, which means they are worse than useless for long-term storage. Tape, on the other hand, can remain in extremely good shape for decades.
Finally, tape systems are simpler and mechanical, which means that they can be maintained in countries that have little or no technology. I would really not want to try to replace a 16-bit DAC chip in a CD player in the middle of the Sahara desert, but unclogging a jammed lever would be relatively easy.
(For that matter, given the choice of making a DAC chip from scratch, or winding copper to make a motor, it's fairly obvious as to what the minimum level of technology you'd need would be.)
That's not to say that digital formats suck. Well, most do - they're low-cost and low-grade - but that's because manufacturers are cheapskates and not because the concept is flawed. Digital formats should be "better than live", because stage microphones are generally poorer than studio microphones, studio power should be a great deal "cleaner", and RFI interference should be much more controllable.
In reality, CDs are 16-bit 44.1 KHz lossy recordings on aluminium disks (the cheapest type you can go for, which means there may well be errors in the recordings, as well as having no meaningful life-expectancy). Live digital instruments (such as professional keyboards) are often 20- to 24-bit, 192 KHz, and lossless digital amplifiers have been around since the 60s. (Though damn-near lossless high-end analogue amplifiers have been around about as long.)
What we're getting is third-rate crap that only rich corporations can even maintain, which means most consumers treat such devices as disposable. And then people wonder why those who can't afford, or don't even have access to, those rich corporations opt for something that - for all intents and purposes - is just as good but much more useful to them.
For further notes on this, you might want to check out the clockwork radio (1 hour+ of listening time) that is popular in Africa. When you can't go round the corner for batteries, low-tech solutions that produce high-tech results are going to be popular.
Re:Cassettes (Score:5, Funny)
Damn my incompatible 10bit 30Khz ears!
Nissan, Chrysler and others (Score:2)
CDs will disappear before tape does (Score:2)
Re:CDs will disappear before tape does (Score:3, Interesting)
Robust... (Score:2)
Wooden Sneakers (Score:2)
What I found a bit interesting (Score:2)
Director of Research
at the
International Federation of Phonographic Industries
Re:Naaaa, really? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Naaaa, really? (Score:2)
Keeping CDs in their cases works wonders.
I've lost 2 CDs to scratches over the last 18 years of having CDs.
Re:Naaaa, really? (Score:2)
CD-R's are another story. Don't by cheapies.
About 6 years ago when cheap CD-R's were $1.00 a piece, I bought a hundred of them. Now the foil is flaking off.
Re:Naaaa, really? (Score:2)
People hated them, and the world moved to tray-loading drives.http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_i
Re:Naaaa, really? (Score:2)
Re:Naaaa, really? (Score:2)
The problem being that most renters are 10 years old and don't use the case. I've had to return a couple of rented DVDs because they were so scratched they were unwatchable.
Re:secure storage (Score:2)
Re:mp3 is king (Score:2)
long live the king! (mp3)
The king isn't dead. [rollingstone.com]
Re:Analogue formats will never die. (Score:2, Informative)
Macrovision is an analog copy protection system.
Re:Rewinding (Score:2)
Vinyl? Aesthetic? (Score:2)
Re:Stupid CD player (Score:2)
Close (Score:2)
Re:Suggestions Anyone: Analog to Digital? (Score:2)
Once it is in your computer, editing, cleaning, and splitting tracks can be done with Audacity [sourceforge.net], which is covered under the GPL. I've used this to convert several tapes and LPs to CD and MP3, and it works quite well.
If you're looking to program software for it, the obvious places to s