Quote from: Bloated Slutbag on September 02, 2020, 04:58:33 PM
Stupid question then but-
digital = too perfect?
In a way yes, and so "unreal"... here is an example - links to the packaging thread BTW, by an Artist who collects White Albums...
not only does each Vinyl have music but a unique history of its being played and handled...
http://rutherfordchang.com/white.html If you scroll down you can hear a montage of 100 white albums, (Eventually becomes NOISE) and a digital version would be pretty much no different to a single CD.
Also
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Am_Sitting_in_a_Room& visual 'version' Ian Burn Xerox Book -
Also all digital CDs are effectively just very big numbers, and there is therefore a fixed set of any digital media whereas analogue might be infinite?
(An audio CD stores music by patterns of bits. Each audio sample is 16 Bits, and each second of sound has 44100 samples... Multiply 16 by 44100, by 2 by 60 by 74 and we get 6265728000. That is the total number of bits that can be stored on a normal CD or CDR. If you convert this to bytes, you get around 740 megabytes, which is about right, 740 megabytes is the storage capacity of CDs and CDRs. Given that each bit in this totality can be different this gives us 2 to the power 6265728000 possible CDs, and no more, in this format.
http://www.jliat.com/APCDS/index.html)