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The CD Turns 25 Today

netbuzz writes "Seems like only yesterday to those of us of a certain age, but the CD turns 25 today. Philips, maker of the first CD on Aug. 17, 1982, estimates that more than 200 billion have been sold since. The younger set might have trouble appreciating the difference in auditory quality that the compact disc represented over vinyl or cassette tapes (some have probably never even seen a record). And all but true trivia buffs will have trouble coming up with the name of the artist on that first disc."

11 of 326 comments (clear)

  1. Stupid CDs by eln · · Score: 3, Informative
    I had to laugh at this part of the press release:

    The invention of the CD ushered in a technological revolution in the music industry as CDs -- with their superior sound quality and scratch free durability -- marked the beginning of the shift from analog to digital music technology. I think that initially CDs were intended to come in plastic cartridges that would protect the actual playing surface from scratches, but those were eliminated very early on. The CD as released is very fragile and prone to scratching. In the old days of cassette tapes, I could throw all my tapes in a big pile and still be fairly confident they would play (unless I left them out in the sun or something). If you try and throw your CDs into a big pile, you're going to get a big pile of scratched up coasters.

    Maybe CDs are more scratch resistant than LPs (which isn't saying much), but they're still ridiculously fragile. Maybe music piracy wouldn't be so prevalent if CDs were more durable. I know that I hesitate to buy CDs because I don't want to spend 15-20 bucks on something that could end up being worthless in 6 months if I don't treat it with extreme care.
    1. Re:Stupid CDs by TeknoHog · · Score: 3, Informative

      IMHO, the worst problem with scratches is that the data surface is just below the label side, with the bulk of the plastic in CDs being part of the optical path. You can usually polish off scratches on the optical side, but any significant scratches on the label side will destroy the data. DVDs are much better in this sense, as the data layer is exactly in the middle of the disc.

      Another stupidity about the audio CD standard is that you've got this nice digital storage space, yet all the metadata is stored on liner notes only. Surely it wouldn't have hurt to add some kind of metadata into the spec, even if most early players hadn't been able to use it.

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  2. Re:The First Discs Were Not ABBA by greg1104 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Maybe ABBA's "The Visitors" was the first commercially released CD in the United States

    Nope, that was "52nd Street" by Billy Joel.

  3. Re:how many of them work after that time by Greg01851 · · Score: 4, Informative

    I have quite a few CD's purchased in the 80's that work just fine. It's the CD-R versions that degrade over just a few years, the commercially pressed ones last quite awhile. reference: http://computerworld.com/hardwaretopics/storage/st ory/0,10801,107607,00.html

  4. Re:The First Discs Were Not ABBA by taupin · · Score: 4, Informative

    Billy Joel's 52nd Street was actually the first album released on a CD in Japan.

  5. Re:The First Discs Were Not ABBA by swillden · · Score: 4, Informative

    Huh, that's funny because I always thought that the first discs were of the Alpine Symphony by Richard Strauß. I read about it yesterday on an actual article that isn't written like a comedian was drunk.

    According to Philips the first discs from the assembly line in Langenhangen were ABBA's "The Visitor".

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  6. Re:War on standards by 644bd346996 · · Score: 3, Informative

    CD-R, CD-RW was one schism ... No, it wasn't. CD-R is a write-once medium. CD-RW is a re-writable medium that is significantly more expensive and less compatible. The two have never been in direct competition, because they are not in the same market niche.

    DVD-R[W] vs. DVD+R[W] vs. DVD-RAM was a true format war, but it has been completely resolved. (ie. -RAM is completely dead and almost all burners on the market support +/-R.) The only active format war right now is HD vs. Blu-ray, and while it far from over, there are drives that support both.
  7. Re:sad by Vellmont · · Score: 3, Informative


    Technology progresses quickly, but humans aren't quite as fast, it seems :-(

    No, people just don't really care about the original meaning of words, nor should they. Do you get bent out of shape every time someone talking about "dialing" a telephone, even though 99% of telephones no longer have a dial? There's hundreds of examples like this where the original etymology of the word was forgotten and the words takes on a modified meaning of the original. That's just how language works.

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  8. Re:The First Discs Were Not ABBA by asynchronous13 · · Score: 5, Informative

    lots of subtle distinction in claiming 'first'

    1st cd pressed ever: Herbert von Karajan conducting the Alpine Symphony by Richard Strauß (one-off type production)
    1st cd manufactured: ABBA - The Visitor
    1st cd released in the USA: Billy Joel - 52nd Street
    1st cd manufactured in the USA: Bruce Springsteen - Born in the USA
    1st cd single: Dire Straits

  9. Re:The 74-minute story by Bigjeff5 · · Score: 3, Informative

    According to Wikipedia, there was probably more than just a love for classical music in here; the demand for 74 minutes as opposed to 60 (which necessitated 120mm discs instead of 115) was strategic. Polygram (one of Sony's major competitors) already had an experimental facility set up to make 115mm discs, Sony didn't, and therefore it was advantageous to force 120mm in order to start the playing field off level

    I don't believe the fact that Polygram had a 115mm factory was a major factor in going to 120mm, at best it was one of those "hey that's even better!" situations for Sony.

    Why do I say this? Because Sony and Phillips produced the Compact Disk as a JOINT venture. Polygram was owned by Phillips. Had they produced the CD in 115mm format instead of 120mm, it would have been rather simple to facilitate a production deal that would put Sony at no disadvantage. And trust me, there's no way Sony would have gone in on the venture if they didn't have wording in the contract requiring something to that effect.

    Besides, I'm no engineer, but I don't think a retool from 115mm to 120mm for a brand new technology that had never been produced before was really that big of a deal for Polygram.
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  10. Re:Happy Birthday! by Binestar · · Score: 3, Informative

    Almost posted this as an AC, but oh well.

    The power comes from an Matter/Antimatter annihilation. The crystals just regulate the reaction.

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