The End Of Vinyl In 2009!!
The End Of Vinyl In 2009!!
Ive nicked this off another forum, apparantly it was written by Bill Brewster. Has anyone else got any info on this??
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"It looks as though audiophiles may have to resign
themselves to the fact that in a few years time
there will be only the chance to fondly re-live
the good old days of nostalgia, rather than
experience the new. Vinyl, the medium that took
over from Shellac, Bakelite and even earlier the
wax pressing, has had its final play well,
almost. The year 2009, looks set to be the final
turn in the long standing vinyl revolution.
A June 2003 press release from The Institute of
Chemical Engineering, advised that key by-
products of the current petroleum refining
process would no longer be generated by 2009, due
to deadlines agreed, in principle, with the
chemical industry back in 1992. These deadlines
were however, only finalised in 1999, in the face
of increasing environmental concerns and lobbying.
The IoCE went on to advise that a voluntary
co-funded research and development program to
seek a green alternative, possibly a
polycarbonate based compound had been proposed in
the 1999 summary. However no members of the
industry wide syndicate had been able to
substantiate a sufficiently high market demand
for a replacement for the petroleum by-product,
which is the primary base for vinyl record albums."
---------
"It looks as though audiophiles may have to resign
themselves to the fact that in a few years time
there will be only the chance to fondly re-live
the good old days of nostalgia, rather than
experience the new. Vinyl, the medium that took
over from Shellac, Bakelite and even earlier the
wax pressing, has had its final play well,
almost. The year 2009, looks set to be the final
turn in the long standing vinyl revolution.
A June 2003 press release from The Institute of
Chemical Engineering, advised that key by-
products of the current petroleum refining
process would no longer be generated by 2009, due
to deadlines agreed, in principle, with the
chemical industry back in 1992. These deadlines
were however, only finalised in 1999, in the face
of increasing environmental concerns and lobbying.
The IoCE went on to advise that a voluntary
co-funded research and development program to
seek a green alternative, possibly a
polycarbonate based compound had been proposed in
the 1999 summary. However no members of the
industry wide syndicate had been able to
substantiate a sufficiently high market demand
for a replacement for the petroleum by-product,
which is the primary base for vinyl record albums."
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mike holiday
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leisuremuffin
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dirtystudios
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well given the next step in DVD the Blue ray format holds 27GB and the whole world is in the process of wireless broadbanding everything I cant see why anyone would still want to lug around big heavy slabs of plastic - by 2009 you'll most likely have top notch audio direct to your phone or laptop - the technology will force it under anyway
it's always been a matter of time
CDs are already just a home burned thing for me - I'm getting rid of crap loads of them so I dont have to lug them all the way to OZ with me - Just taking a 120GB HD
it's always been a matter of time
CDs are already just a home burned thing for me - I'm getting rid of crap loads of them so I dont have to lug them all the way to OZ with me - Just taking a 120GB HD
Maybe final scratch 2 will be a solid replacement. It's coming out this weekend i think.[/quote]
I have just checked the website... the new interface looks more solid of the old one, now it's firewire, no more ubs and it has midi.
http://www.finalscratch.com/v3/prod_fs2.shtml#
I have just checked the website... the new interface looks more solid of the old one, now it's firewire, no more ubs and it has midi.
http://www.finalscratch.com/v3/prod_fs2.shtml#
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mike holiday
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doubletakeman
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Yes I tend to agree with you, how often has this been predicted?..anyway werent vestax or someone producing discs for their cutting system that were pretty different from vinyl and 90% as durable..it seems to me that a probably better replacement for the material would not be impossible to produce..doubletakeman wrote:This is bullshit.. it's only from one source and it's some cat that made up plenty of other rumors.
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Pitch Black
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sweetjesus
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There is a raw ingredient used in the manufacture of vinyl which wont be available by 2009 due to its effect on the environment. The price of this ingredient will rise astranomically a year or two before 2009 which will mean labels will not be able to afford to manufacture vinyl. Eventually the few remaining vinyl pressing plants will close down. The smart ones are shifting their operations to DVD and CD manufacturing as we speak.doubletakeman wrote:This is bullshit.. it's only from one source and it's some cat that made up plenty of other rumors.
vnyl is coming to an end just like 2" recording tape which is no longer manufactured.
Progress cant be stopped.