- Jan 16, 2004
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I like listening to music, but I don't understand collecting huge libraries of music for personal devices. There are several things I'm not understanding:
1. How you can accumulate 100GB+ of music
a. That's literally over a month of music. With heavy use you can still go multiple months without listening to the same song twice.
b. How people can afford this. 100GB of music is conservatively 15,000+ songs. Lets assume these are all purchased as albums and each album (15 songs) costs $10. $10,000 seems like a lot for one normal person to spend on music.
2. Why is having a personal music collection vastly superior to listening to the radio, or other streaming services like Pandora? The latter is free and has sufficient variety.
Even if the cost of music was 1/10th of that, I fail to see how it is any better than simply using on-demand radio. :whiste:
Explain.
1. How you can accumulate 100GB+ of music
a. That's literally over a month of music. With heavy use you can still go multiple months without listening to the same song twice.
b. How people can afford this. 100GB of music is conservatively 15,000+ songs. Lets assume these are all purchased as albums and each album (15 songs) costs $10. $10,000 seems like a lot for one normal person to spend on music.
2. Why is having a personal music collection vastly superior to listening to the radio, or other streaming services like Pandora? The latter is free and has sufficient variety.
Even if the cost of music was 1/10th of that, I fail to see how it is any better than simply using on-demand radio. :whiste:
Explain.