During the 1990s, music was almost invariably stored on CDs or cassette tapes. When the new millennium came around, physical formats became obsolete as music moved first to MP3 files, and later to ...
Roger is a long-time tech journalist with many site credits including AppleInsider and Android Authority. His specialties include everything from Apple, Android, and Windows devices through to ...
Every so often, the BBC proudly puts out a press release that it has found a long-lost episode of Doctor Who on a dusty ...
These obsolete things boomers took for granted were once everyday essentials before technology made them disappear for good.
Stacked in small antique shops to online collection of vintage albums, in the age of Dolby sounds and wireless earphones, ...
The imageFORCE C3100 Series: Replaces the imageRUNNER ADVANCE DX C3900 Series and introduces the 50 page per minute model, the imageFORCE C3150. The series includes four models: C3150, C3135, C3130, ...
Computex always delivers PC-enthusiast eye candy, but this year's standouts pushed the envelope with transparent components, ...
There is something comforting about reaching for a device, format, or habit that asks you to slow down. As digital fatigue pushes more Gen Z and millennial consumers toward tangible, screen-free ...
The short-lived storage format that tried to replace CDs (and nearly succeeded) ...
I feel we’ve lost some of the joy of rehearsing and recording together, but the artistic spirit of the work remains intact.” He was a pioneer of the music video, and made a somewhat more modest ...
The music industry's removal of the physical CD single created record revenues at the end of the 1990s but many argue the strategy also accelerated piracy and permanently changed music consumption.
Gen Z is embracing analog living through vinyl records, digicams, CDs, printed books, and retro tech as a reaction to digital ...