• Obinice
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    212 years ago

    Do people not still do this? Isn’t it the most convenient way to store loads of DVDs and CDs?

    • @Daqu@feddit.de
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      422 years ago

      I haven’t used a CD or DVD for years. Most of my devices have no disc drive. Streaming has won, at least for lazy people like me.

      • Obinice
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        12 years ago

        But how do you load the Ultimate Boot CD for Windows 🤓 hehe

        I’m in the same boat honestly, I have a lot of stuff on disks still but I just pull out an old optical drive from the box if I need to read them, or an old laptop or tower or whatever that’s got an optical drive.

        I do wish booting live USB was a little more universally easy though, it can be a bit of a pain in the arse compared to live CDs, these bloody TPMs and weird bios stuff getting in the way are a real pain. But overall, disks have had their day.

        I do still use long term Blu-rays for bulk 10-plus-years cold storage backup though! Wouldn’t trust flash or HDDs for that.

      • @Zanshi@lemmy.world
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        32 years ago

        Honestly yeah, I like having my CDs in their cases on the shelf so if I want to listen to a specific CD I can take it out and play it in a CD player. Sure I have so much music at my fingertips thanks to streaming, but there’s something really personal about taking a disk to listen to it. I guess I understand now what people used to say about vinyls back in the day

    • @Heikki@lemm.ee
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      62 years ago

      I have one that i last updated in 2012 still. I had a nexflix subcription with 3 movies mailed to me that I’d rip in DVDfab and burn to another DVD and mail back the same day i received the movies.

    • TimeSquirrel
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      2 years ago

      No, the most convenient way is ripping them and turning them into media files that I can copy to anything I want.

      Archiving them like this also helps fight against bit rot. They aren’t getting any younger (and by the CD/DVD’s last days, they weren’t exactly made out of the most high quality materials). I’m already experiencing this with floppies and retro computer stuff.

    • The Quuuuuill
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      22 years ago

      Its not that we found a better way to store media disks. Its that we found a better way to store media thanks to storage devices getting cheaper

    • @LucyLastic@sh.itjust.works
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      12 years ago

      I do, because DVDs can’t get pulled from streaming services or be region locked, and it’s worked out cheaper to buy discs than subscribe to yet another service