Re-remastered and rereleased
Do you know what I learned today? Digital music never loses quality. If you copy a CD 17 times, it never gets worse quality. Guess who I learned it from? My good friend, Ben. Ironic.
So, I'm offering you Ben Yancer's The Leap for the incredible steal-of-a-price of $8 including shipping and handling. That's FIVE dollars off. Nearly a 40% discount. Folks, I'm not even making a profit on this. I do it all for my love of music and art and the betterment of ourselves and our society.
Email me today. Don't wait a second longer.
5 comments:
As long as you don't change formats you don't lose quality on digital music. However, if you continually resave as mp3, ogg, aac, wmv, etc, you will lose quality. That's because they make their small file size by losing information. There are a few lossless audio formats though, such as flac.
Then there's the whole archiving issue. A burned CD will show significant degredation after just 2 years. Even a stamped CD won't last longer than 20 years. Any medium will show degredation over time, so though the digital quality isn't going down, the file can become unreadable.
Not that any of this has anything to do with Ben's CD or the ethics of you offering it for a lower price, but I thought I'd share.
Thanks for the laugh, Just. I'll take a copy.
you are dirty, dirty, dirty.
Interesting facts... don't really have much to say, just got an interesting word verification combination (gccusda). it almost makes sense. seems like it should stand for something...like "General Conference Confederates of United Seventh-day Adventists"... yep.
It's almost time for your monthly blog. What will it be?
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