@oregonpapa
I have no CD collection any longer. When I saw the end in sight, I ripped everything to MP3 (I had never even heard of FLAC way back then) and then sold them off to the used CD store, while it was still open. Maybe I had a vision, but when Napster was a hot ticket, I realized the music industry was about to make a shift in its way of delivering music. My CD collection was not that extensive--maybe 100 discs or so. When I figured out FLAC and had a public library card, the majority of my digital library was gained 10 CDs at a time (The limit I could borrow from the library) Hence, on the Cheap. My street cred as 'being cheap' got a solid broadside when an audiophile friend gave me a pair of Nordost Valhalla Reference speaker ribbons. The total value of the Computer Audiophile on the Cheap system went from several hundred dollars to $4,000 plus a few Hundred dollars. Such problems to have...
I have no CD collection any longer. When I saw the end in sight, I ripped everything to MP3 (I had never even heard of FLAC way back then) and then sold them off to the used CD store, while it was still open. Maybe I had a vision, but when Napster was a hot ticket, I realized the music industry was about to make a shift in its way of delivering music. My CD collection was not that extensive--maybe 100 discs or so. When I figured out FLAC and had a public library card, the majority of my digital library was gained 10 CDs at a time (The limit I could borrow from the library) Hence, on the Cheap. My street cred as 'being cheap' got a solid broadside when an audiophile friend gave me a pair of Nordost Valhalla Reference speaker ribbons. The total value of the Computer Audiophile on the Cheap system went from several hundred dollars to $4,000 plus a few Hundred dollars. Such problems to have...

