A lot of storage space in my house (particularly under the stairs) is dedicated to music & films of various formats.
I still play the occasional LaserDisc film and marvel at it's non-blockness and lack of compression.
I see it as the video equivilent of vinyl
My Sony DAT player still sounds excellent despite the "demise" of the format.
A well engineered CD can sound remarkably good on the right set up, but although it's been long surpassed
technically, it has yet to be threatened
commercially.
I've been collecting DTS 5.1 audio CDs for some time now and they really push the envelope when it comes to the soundstage and general dynamics.
These albums are readily available by mail order and can be played on most home cinema systems yet have failed to make the impact that they truly deserve.
Everyone who hears them at my place think it's amazing and some sort of prototype system when in reality the format has been knocking around for ages.
Sure, the format is ticking over but does it have a commercial future?
Unfortunately it's not always the best format that wins (VHS/Beta anyone?).
Given that anyone who is listening to a BluRay disc via DolbyTrue (or DTS Master Audio) is hearing a bit-for-bit digital stream of what came out of the mixing desk, surely one would expect that this should represent the Holy Grail in music carrier formats.
Technically, this format really is 100% lossless and can support 24-bit/192 kHz audio.
The discs are cheap to press and there's plenty of space for value added extras.
Clearly it beats the humble CD on all areas, but will it ever see the light of day as an audio format?
Apart from the people I work with, I'm horrified that most of my social circle are quite happy with their tinny TV sound, FM radios and mp3 players.
CD was designed from day one to be a good quality format for the masses and will probably remain so for many more years to come.
Having a vast digital collection just isn't the same "touchy-feely" experience that you get with opening that jewel case with the one broken hinge containing the booklet.
That's what made vinyl so great, the album art was part of the experience.
It's a great shame the way things have gone in the past decade or so, the average person is now accustomed to the awful compressed sound of mp3, they choose to ignore the dire quality of a lot of the SD channels available (or as I call it LegoVision).
Even the once breathtaking quality of BBC HD has taken a bit-reduction hit since it's launch.
OK to be fair it's not bad, but it certainly not what it could be.
Again, commercial interests dictate that reduced bandwidth means better economy.
So is CD finished as a main music carrier or player?
I think not, especially when the planet's largest music company, Universal, it set to slash the resale price of all it's CD releases in the US to around £4 - £5 mark with the rest of the territories more than likely to follow.
At that price, it makes owning that little silver disc just that bit more enticing
That's not the death knell of CD you can hear in the distance, it's the rebirth.
( Steps down from soapbox just in time to watch Cougar Town in HD - yes, I know, but she's still hot! )