2010-01-06, 06:55
^^Forgive me but We can't have this kind of thing being spread across the internet. Next thing you know Everyone will be forking out double per cd for black ones.
You are talking about a digital media format. It's not analog. There's no grey fuzzy area. Either the bit has been set, or the bit has not been set. That's like saying if you flip your light switch too slow it's going to be 1/2 light in your place. It's not analog, it's digital. It's either there, or it's not.
After looking at this picture I realize it is time to get new furnature, and make my girlfriend not take my camera when she goes on vacations.
designgears Wrote:All wrong... try this...
Take one of your cd's, get a black permanent marker and blacken the center clear ring. Even better, go get some black CD-R's and copy a cd to it. You will notice a pretty substantial change in the sound quality when played back on a cd player.
Simple logic behind this, black absorbs light, so less laser reflection.
You are talking about a digital media format. It's not analog. There's no grey fuzzy area. Either the bit has been set, or the bit has not been set. That's like saying if you flip your light switch too slow it's going to be 1/2 light in your place. It's not analog, it's digital. It's either there, or it's not.
After looking at this picture I realize it is time to get new furnature, and make my girlfriend not take my camera when she goes on vacations.