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In the early eighties, cassette tapes were a smash hit. They were a huge step up for the bulky LPs and eight tracks of the previous decade. For those who are unaware of an LP is, it is a vinyl record. People had tape players all over the place with towers upon towers of tapes. They had them in their cars, on their hips, in their homes, and even at their places of employment. You could listen to virtually anyone you wanted to anywhere you wanted to. This was thought to be the best audio invention of the century. Little did consumers know that audio specialists were working hard in their laboratories to create a media as round as a roll of toilet paper, the compact disc. This item was to contain what is
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There are two new forms of media that music is being recorded on to that could soon be a big competitor of the compact disc. If you were born in or before the eighties, you know that the word digital was a very technical, futuristic term. The CD can transmit 705,600 bits per second (Kaplan). The cost of a CD player was well over a thousand dollars when first hitting the market (Klein). These songs can be put on to CD though via a CD-R disc. These abbreviations stand for compact disc recordable and compact disc rewritable. Many of these CD players were left of shelves due to the main reason of cost.
Portable devices such as the Rio, for example, allow you to take music off of your computer and carry it with you where ever you go.
According to Larry Klein of “Electronics Now”, the compact disc was officially introduced in 1983. These programs are on the fine line of legality when it comes to copyright infringement. This disc can be read by virtually any CD player, even one of the original players back from the early eighties. They run anywhere between ninety and two hundred dollars.
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