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For a Missouri Cassette Tape Factory, Obsolesence is Just a 12-Letter Word (arstechnica.com)

The Missouri-based National Audio Company, reports Ars Technica, is sweeping up in a category that our future-looking selves might twenty years ago have imagined would be dead and buried in the year 2015: making and selling audiocassettes. There are fewer and fewer competitors in the tape-making business, but NAC still has a healthy market for cassettes -- in October, the company noted "a 31 percent increase in order volume over the previous year." From the article: [Company president Steve Stepp] said that as his competitors began bailing out of the cassette business once CDs came to prominence, NAC started buying up their machinery. “It would have been incredibly expensive 30 to 35 years ago when [cassette manufacturing machines] were new on the market, but when our competitors bailed out of the business and started making CDs, we went round the country and bought [them] out," he said. Some artists are still releasing music on tape, but about 70 percent of what the company sells is blank cassettes; there are an awful lot of tape decks out there; my father alone still buys a few hundred blanks each year.

13 of 169 comments (clear)

  1. Really? by ledow · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Ob so le se nc e is Just a 12-Letter Word"

    Really?

    1. Re:Really? by rockout · · Score: 5, Informative

      How great is it that they spelled it wrong but got the letter count of the correct spelling?

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      I've learned that they're worthless, so I don't read AC comments anymore.
  2. The best by rockout · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I loved buying Maxell XL-IIS blanks. That being said, I can't see buying and making tapes today. It'd be like buying an old Polaroid camera... oh wait I did that

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    I've learned that they're worthless, so I don't read AC comments anymore.
  3. Very few mediums die completely by Viol8 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Obviously there are exceptions like wax cylinders and stone tablets, but in general if a medium is cheap and/or does a job thats not easily or cheaply replicated elsewhere it'll stick around. As soon as the Next Thing comes along certain people always predict the demise of that which its superceding. Cassette was supposed to kill vinyl. It didn't. Ditto CDs, they didn't. MP3s were supposed to kill CDs and cassettes. They didn't. Streaming - we are told - is the end of downloads. Yeah, right. DVD killed VHS? No it didn't - not until set top box recorders came along to fill in that functionality. Automatic gearboxes were the death knell of manual transmissions. Oh really? Now driverless cars will be the end of human driven cars. No, don't think so.

    Anyone who predicts the end of anything without waiting a few decades is an idiot.

    1. Re:Very few mediums die completely by MightyYar · · Score: 4, Insightful

      CDs killed vinyl just as surely as digital has killed CDs. That a few holdouts still use them does not make them any less dead as a mainstream medium. You can still ride a horse if you like, and once a year a significant number of people even watch a horse race. That does not mean that the automobile did not kill the horse.

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    2. Re:Very few mediums die completely by TWX · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Obviously there are exceptions like wax cylinders and stone tablets, but in general if a medium is cheap and/or does a job thats not easily or cheaply replicated elsewhere it'll stick around. As soon as the Next Thing comes along certain people always predict the demise of that which its superceding. Cassette was supposed to kill vinyl. It didn't. Ditto CDs, they didn't. MP3s were supposed to kill CDs and cassettes. They didn't. Streaming - we are told - is the end of downloads. Yeah, right. DVD killed VHS? No it didn't - not until set top box recorders came along to fill in that functionality. Automatic gearboxes were the death knell of manual transmissions. Oh really? Now driverless cars will be the end of human driven cars. No, don't think so.

      Anyone who predicts the end of anything without waiting a few decades is an idiot.

      On the other hand, the drop in volume can be measured, and eventually the drop in volume reaches a point where the only customers left are niche customers, and sometimes there aren't enough niche customers to justify production anymore.

      I have a fairly large LaserDisc collection. There were machines to record LaserDisc, but they were very limited in number. No one produces blanks for them anymore just as no one produces titles on LaserDisc anymore. There had been "Selectavision", an RCA system for movies that played on a vinyl disc. No more of those either. 8-track also appears to be completely out of production even though it had achieved fairly significant market penetration, to the point it was common in automobiles and home stereos in the seventies and touching the eighties.

      This particular factory, if they play their cards right, can be the niche manufacturer for a whole bunch of media as the big players get out. They have to be careful and pick-and-choose what's worth trying to keep up with, but if they choose wisely they can continue to be the source for blanks and possibly even factory-mastered media for some time after the big players stop. If they choose poorly though, that could just knock them out.

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    3. Re:Very few mediums die completely by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Interesting

      They company still makes DAT tape. I still record digital audio to tape as my old sony pocket DAT recorder still kicks the crap out of any other portable recording system out there. and the DAT drive I have hanging off of a SCSI->USB reads in the digital audio to the PC just beautifully.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  4. "still buys a few hundred blanks each year." by Nutria · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's more than the number of weekdays in the year. What the hell does he do with that many?

    --
    "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
    1. Re:"still buys a few hundred blanks each year." by Nutria · · Score: 4, Funny

      Because in the new reality they're trying to create, you are liable for what your customers do with your product.

      The RIAA/MPAA should sue the electric companies that supply the power to pirates. After all, those computers don't run on hamsters!!

      --
      "I don't know, therefore Aliens" Wafflebox1
  5. Blind folks still use cassette tape quite a lot. by Myself · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You can feel the weight balance to tell how much of the tape is on one reel versus the other. You can rewind and fastforward by gut-feeling, with no display. Every operation of the player is tactile, and there are no hidden options menus, touchscreens, or any of that crap.

  6. Dice: /. reciclyng arstechnica articles ... badly by williamyf · · Score: 5, Informative

    I read TFA last night from ARS itself...

    As soon as I read the summary, I realized they got it backwards.

    From TFA:

    ''In a September article, Bloomberg reported that NAC “has deals with major record labels like Sony Music Entertainment and Universal Music Group as well as a number of small contracts with indie bands. About 70 percent of the company's sales are from music cassettes while the rest are blank cassettes.” ''

    70% pre-recorded; 30% blanks.

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  7. Re:Only for weirdos and 4x4s by lgw · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Well, at least vinyl still does something that even CDs can't

    Make hipsters happy? It has no audio advantage, to be sure.

    Big fancy magtape can kick the crap out of a CD,

    Make audiophiles happy? Make your cables danceable?

    The only limitation of CDs (if you include CD-Rs etc) is that they only contain enough information to match perfect human hearing, so you might want more bits for the mastering process, where some information loss is inevitable. But for consumer use, just playing the music, CDs are right.

    The only example that makes sense is a tube amp, which distorts sound in a way many people find pleasing.

    --
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  8. Re:Only for weirdos and 4x4s by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Funny

    Except Hipsters have a buttload more money than the rednecks... and they pay very well for someone to restore that 1965 motorcycle for them and add a beard holder.

    I love hipsters, they actually pay their bills.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.