Does anybody else have a collection of 1000 pounds of plastic that's been made mostly obsolete by modern streaming services?
A recent post in the WAYS thread by @AppalachianPiper92 had a picture of a pipe sitting on top of a CD copy of Miles Smiles. It reminded me of the problem my collection represents. I spent about a decade tracking down the entire Miles Davis catalogue. I needed to own everything he ever released and all the live performances available. I think I have 70+ Miles Davis CDs. They're sitting on a shelf I built in the back of a spare bedroom closet to get them out of the way along with the rest of my massive collection. Maybe 10 percent of my total collection is rare or obscure, but the rest of it is available, either for free on youtube, or for a nominal monthly fee. I carried all this plastic from one apartment to another, across the continent and back again, then from house, to house...to house. In 2004 I bought a 40 gig iPod and uploaded about 2/3 of my collection at that time, so I could take it with me when I went to work on ships.
I've looked into getting rid of the collection, because it takes up so much space. What is not available from streaming services is the great packaging, historical essays and liner notes, especially in all the jazz and classical packages. Does anyone else have the same problem of a bunch of useless plastic taking up valuable space? I'm afraid it's all going to end up in a landfill eventually, one way or another. CDs are not recyclable, and their resale value may not be worth the effort to sell them.
A recent post in the WAYS thread by @AppalachianPiper92 had a picture of a pipe sitting on top of a CD copy of Miles Smiles. It reminded me of the problem my collection represents. I spent about a decade tracking down the entire Miles Davis catalogue. I needed to own everything he ever released and all the live performances available. I think I have 70+ Miles Davis CDs. They're sitting on a shelf I built in the back of a spare bedroom closet to get them out of the way along with the rest of my massive collection. Maybe 10 percent of my total collection is rare or obscure, but the rest of it is available, either for free on youtube, or for a nominal monthly fee. I carried all this plastic from one apartment to another, across the continent and back again, then from house, to house...to house. In 2004 I bought a 40 gig iPod and uploaded about 2/3 of my collection at that time, so I could take it with me when I went to work on ships.
I've looked into getting rid of the collection, because it takes up so much space. What is not available from streaming services is the great packaging, historical essays and liner notes, especially in all the jazz and classical packages. Does anyone else have the same problem of a bunch of useless plastic taking up valuable space? I'm afraid it's all going to end up in a landfill eventually, one way or another. CDs are not recyclable, and their resale value may not be worth the effort to sell them.