Modern Walkmans
Posted by classichasclass 1 day ago
Comments
Comment by al_borland 1 day ago
Minidisc is the format I have some nostalgia for. It never blew up, but it felt like the best of both worlds. You could record from the radio like a digital cassette tapes, and even trim out the DJ and reorder tracks… and give them names. You could also buy them like a CD. From a digital file you could use a TOSlink cable to get a great quality recording at home. And the later ones even played MP3s directly. It could really do it all.
Comment by masklinn 1 day ago
This was far from the only drawback with CDs especially early on, at least in mobile applications: the media (and thus player) is bulky, cases are fragile (in part through increased leverage), it has low resilience to physical damage, and before memory prices hit low enough for significant buffering the slightest g forces would lead to skips.
MDs were real progress on that front. Shame it was quite expensive and the digital models were hobbled by horrendous software. And obviously flash-based pmps then smartphones are their lunch entirely.
Comment by 4dregress 1 day ago
You had to step very lightly when using it as it was just itching to skip.
It would also eat through batteries like no one’s business.
Comment by cycomanic 1 day ago
Comment by MrSkelter 23 hours ago
They then wasted billions and decades in formats other companies wouldn’t touch because they had fees attached. Minidisc being a prime example. Sounded worse than CDs, cost the same. Had a recording feature people already had with cassette.
Comment by ofrzeta 20 hours ago
Comment by actionfromafar 1 day ago
Comment by ofrzeta 20 hours ago
Comment by actionfromafar 19 hours ago
Comment by masklinn 23 hours ago
Comment by actionfromafar 21 hours ago
They just never connected these things to each other. It could have been a great standard and we would have been plagued to this day with them. :)
In some ways it's even better than USB flash. There are no read-only flash drives, for instance. It's also a problem that you mosh "data" in the same port you mosh "keyboard" or "spy device". We gained a lot with the USB paradigm but we lost some things, too.
Comment by xtiansimon 13 hours ago
Comment by tastyfreeze 16 hours ago
Comment by esseph 22 hours ago
Comment by otabdeveloper4 1 day ago
No it doesn't. As a child, one time I tried to make a CD unplayable and literally couldn't do it. (Sandpaper didn't do the trick.)
The real issue was the skipping when you tried to use a portable CD player.
Comment by masklinn 1 day ago
Yes it does.
> As a child, one time I tried to make a CD unplayable and literally couldn't do it. (Sandpaper didn't do the trick.)
Either child you was incompetent or your player was very good at error recovery, because I personally saw a number of car CDs thrown out as the car’s stereo was unable to read them anymore.
Comment by amatecha 1 day ago
Comment by pandaman 7 hours ago
But the label side is indeed very fragile as you can easily damage the reflective pits, only covered by a layer of paint. It's as same as a simple mirror, where the thin layer of reflective metal is very well protected from the front but is only covered with paint in the back.
Comment by IAmBroom 18 hours ago
If it did exist, some toothpaste rubbed tangentially around the CD on your fingertips was often enough to buff it out, at least as far as the 30-byte limit cared.
It was a phenomenal jump in data integrity, built in at the recording level. Sure, you could encode even floppies with that scheme... but your computer didn't, natively.
Comment by extrabajs 1 day ago
Comment by otabdeveloper4 1 day ago
Comment by IAmBroom 18 hours ago
Comment by Grisu_FTP 7 minutes ago
Comment by chickensong 1 day ago
Comment by jochem9 1 day ago
The poor audio quality can be seen as desired feature btw. It brings a certain lofi or warmth with it.
Comment by latexr 23 hours ago
https://cartoonstockart.com/featured/the-two-things-that-rea...
Comment by soneil 20 hours ago
I do value the inconvenience. When I put an album on, I put an album on. I don't hit next, random, go wandering off down rabbitholes. I put the album on.
And I do see the cost as a feature, somewhat. It feels like I got something for my money, in a way that paying for a zip doesn't.
Comment by IAmBroom 18 hours ago
Comment by al_borland 16 hours ago
https://www.musicbusinessworldwide.com/50-of-vinyl-buyers-do...
Comment by Aldipower 1 day ago
Comment by bjackman 1 day ago
Comment by kgwgk 1 day ago
Bringing your own mixtape to a party or a bar or a friend’s car was a thing. Bringing a stack of records seems much less convenient.
Comment by vladvasiliu 1 day ago
Digital seems to have solved both, though.
Comment by MrSkelter 23 hours ago
Music as an object is a thing and playlists are in no way the same. You can’t even control the music on a playlist as it’s in the gift of the streamer.
Comment by vladvasiliu 18 hours ago
It certainly depends on geographical zones, too, but I remember people burning audio cds for quite a while, and taking them on the go with portable players. This was quite widespread before portable mp3 players became common.
Hell, where I grew up, cassettes were still in regular use until the end of the 90s, and mixtapes had grown increasingly rare.
Comment by NoGravitas 18 hours ago
Comment by tmountain 23 hours ago
https://youtu.be/_dgJ4hRHBiw?si=IpjzdgAHJ4Q9yvb5
Quality is indistinguishable from the first playback. Tapes have a bad reputation because most people used them in the cars, which is the equivalent of storing them in an oven on a daily basis. A lot of car stereos were very cheap, and that lead to a lot of cassettes being damaged when they would have been fine otherwise.
Regarding the quality argument. Again, it's going to depend on the media and the equipment. I have a very nice Marantz tape deck, and I use chrome tapes with it. When recorded and played back with dolby noise reduction, it sounds pretty damn good!
https://youtu.be/jVoSQP2yUYA?si=db7QjRt37ENiLMFX
I say this as someone that also owns a very nice turntable and has a digital FLAC media collection, so I'm not married to tapes in any way. They're just something fun to goof around with (and mostly to give my kid a more tangible experience with playing music at home).
Regarding convenience, I can't argue that they're the least convenient media. That said, I'm an album guy, so I like to listen to recordings in their entirety most of the time.
Comment by Gud 19 hours ago
If you must baby them and can’t use them in your car..
Comment by IAmBroom 18 hours ago
Comment by Aldipower 23 hours ago
Comment by burnto 1 day ago
Comment by Aldipower 1 day ago
Comment by vladvasiliu 1 day ago
I can understand that, and I like it, too. But, personally, I dont want to fill my home with random artefacts if it's not strictly required, and I don't know of anything "in my hands" that doesn't come with this issue.
To your compressed Spotify point, I do recognize this as a general issue for modern music distribution, which had already started with CDs (and to which cassettes aren't technically immune either).
So, as a musician, do you know of places selling digital media mastered as the artists intended? I've had good luck with Bandcamp, but they don't have most of the music I'm into.
Comment by Aldipower 1 day ago
Comment by TiredOfLife 1 day ago
Comment by Aldipower 1 day ago
Comment by foxrider 21 hours ago
Comment by port11 18 hours ago
Modern audio has been mastered for loudness, with the corresponding loss of details and instrument separation. Tape media suffers less from this issue, and old vinyl even less so (but not modern releases).
It's an understandable response to the feeling of having lost ‘something’ in the era of digital audio (which is arguably just a matter of processing, not the media itself).
Comment by IAmBroom 18 hours ago
Comment by 4k93n2 1 day ago
the only downside i can think of is the loud screeching every once in a while when the disc is seeking. but that could just be the player that i have maybe
Comment by keyle 1 day ago
Those were the days and gone they have.
Comment by mrexroad 1 day ago
Comment by SirFatty 21 hours ago
Comment by timbit42 8 hours ago
Comment by mytailorisrich 23 hours ago
Minidisc tried to play in that space since minidisc players are very small.
Comment by WorldPeas 1 day ago
Comment by omnicognate 1 day ago
It always amused me how we were told the difference between lossless and lossy compression was undetectable to the human ear up until the big streaming services started providing lossless and even high res, at which point it was suddenly the best thing since sliced bread. However you feel about the audio, one way or another it's gaslighting.
Personally, on most music I can't tell decent quality lossy from lossless, but I listen to a lot of choral polyphony and also perform it so I have a good ear for it. When you're listening to 16 or in some cases up to 40 voices and can follow individual lines (single voices recognisable as particular people) you can hear it, and I disliked minidisc and mp3 players for that reason. High res, though, makes no difference at all as far as I can tell.
Comment by MrSkelter 22 hours ago
Comment by omnicognate 22 hours ago
Edit: I'm very glad lossless is finally mainstream again but I'd be more inclined to believe it's due to "demand" if I weren't routinely the only person on the train wearing wired earphones.
Comment by extrabajs 1 day ago
They were also very affordable!
Comment by brnt 13 hours ago
Comment by cess11 23 hours ago
It's not like metal, dungeon synth and PE/noise artists have just now started publishing on cassette. They've done it for years and years, and you'll find a lot of them on Bandcamp, e.g. https://duckpropaganda.bandcamp.com/album/auditory-chokehold .
Comment by IAmBroom 18 hours ago
Comment by arionmiles 1 day ago
It made me appreciate how these devices are like pieces of beautiful clockwork!
I only had to replace the belt so it wasn't a complicated repair. But, in comparison to the level of documentation manufacturers of any modern electronics offer today, looking at that service manual was a reminder of what we've lost.
Comment by sceptic123 23 hours ago
Comment by arionmiles 20 hours ago
Comment by sceptic123 19 hours ago
Comment by jwr 1 day ago
Comment by philistine 8 hours ago
A banged up old cassette player from Sony will produce higher quality sound than a brand new mechanism.
Comment by fifilura 20 hours ago
https://walkman.land/panasonic/rq-s55
The design was amazing, Apple designs of that time. Extremely slim and I can still recollect the tactile feeling of closing the lid.
I felt like a king owning one.
Comment by jwr 1 hour ago
Comment by socalgal2 1 day ago
Comment by isodev 1 day ago
Same for vinyls and CDs btw. Maybe music is more than just a fancy animation of album arts.
Comment by StrangeSound 1 day ago
It's popular enough that if you look on eBay, the price of an old iPod has become majorly inflated
Comment by isodev 1 day ago
Comment by amatecha 1 day ago
Comment by lloeki 23 hours ago
Comment by philistine 8 hours ago
Apple gets excoriated here for its backward compatibility, when the company takes very good care of its devices' backward compatibility. In Fall 2025 was the first time that any iPod lost support when macOS lost its Firewire drivers. Any USB iPod still completely works with the current version of macOS.
Comment by jpfromlondon 1 day ago
Comment by jsmailes 1 day ago
There's definitely space for tape to persist as a medium, even if quality and longevity is lower -- not everything has to be audiophile level, and the listening experience is far more than just sound quality.
Comment by klez 1 day ago
Isn't that something you can do with streaming services as well?
I understand that many people choose to go with playlists, but it's not like the choice of listening to full albums has been taken away (yet).
Sure, the implementation is lackluster, with gaps between tracks when there shouldn't be one (really annoying on ambient/atmospheric/drone tracks), but still better than nothing.
Comment by jll29 22 hours ago
I wonder how things are going to be in 25 or 50 years, what will today's kids look back with the same kind of devotion and nostalgia.
A lot of things are intangible/immaterial now (for non-geeks/non-hoarders, their inbox, online playlist and photos will likely be gone, they won't have any paper letters or plastic-framed holiday slide photographs or anything like that).
Comment by IAmBroom 18 hours ago
Comment by GeekyBear 1 day ago
I can't imagine choosing a cassette walkman over an mp3 player just based on how much music fits on the device.
Comment by galleywest200 1 day ago
Comment by mrexroad 1 day ago
Comment by iberator 23 hours ago
Comment by Kerrick 1 day ago
Comment by ragazzina 1 day ago
Comment by GeekyBear 14 hours ago
Comment by burnt-resistor 1 day ago
And the 80's and 90's weren't that great. The best thing that happened was George Carlin on pirated analog HBO telling us how Americans were morons and that everything sucked. ;o)
Flash storage bit rots. As do consumer writable optical media. RAID HDD or you ain't got nothing.
Comment by changadera 1 day ago
The funny thing is, even though I'm just about old enough to have bought a few chart music cassettes when they were a contemporary medium, I don't own any cassettes and I only had the player because I bought it on eBay to experiment with tape degradation for music.
Comment by eudamoniac 15 hours ago
Comment by thomassmith65 1 day ago
Probably of interest to people here is this article from the dawn of the Walkman: https://time.com/archive/6697378/living-a-great-way-to-snub-...
Comment by fsckboy 1 day ago
https://www.radiomuseum.org/images/radio/sony_tokyo/fm_walkm...
(i wasn't against cassette walkmans, but i was against carrying enough tapes to mimic the variety of music that they played on the radio)
Comment by sceptic123 1 day ago
Are they talking about cassette tapes? Maybe my memory is failing me, but I don't remember that being a thing back in the day.
Comment by klez 1 day ago
TL;DR: Like many of us you probably had shitty equipment and shitty cassettes. They are more than capable of sounding great with the right tools.
Comment by sceptic123 21 hours ago
Comment by 112233 20 hours ago
Comment by nickt 1 day ago
Comment by komali2 1 day ago
Since Sony doesn't manufacture their phenomenally small mechanisms anymore, the era of the tape sized tape player is gone unless someone invests millions in r&d and setting up manufacturing.
Also in terms of quality: fine, but the video found better quality from vintage units he had cleaned up.
I don't have the video saved sorry.
Comment by ares623 1 day ago
Comment by ares623 1 day ago
Sadly I don’t see new mechanisms appearing anytime soon. But there is still hope. There have been new film cameras with modern innards recently released.
Comment by maratc 1 day ago
Comment by normie3000 1 day ago
Comment by 47282847 1 day ago
(Personally, I do prefer the modern Bluetooth+mobile+app+voice control).
Comment by normie3000 2 hours ago
Comment by firesteelrain 1 day ago
Comment by mycall 1 day ago
Comment by joombaga 1 day ago
Comment by ivolimmen 1 day ago
Comment by amatecha 1 day ago
Comment by tosapple 1 day ago
Comment by tosapple 19 hours ago
Comment by amatecha 18 hours ago
Comment by Nursie 1 day ago
I had one of these in black - https://walkman.land/panasonic/rq-s30
Gorgeous little machine, not much bigger than a cassette in its box, all metal. It felt about as well designed and built as apple stuff does now. It wasn't long after that we got minidiscs (and we know how that went), and then mp3 players conquered the world.
Comment by StrangeSound 1 day ago
Comment by worthless-trash 1 day ago
Comment by Nursie 1 day ago
There was also (IIRC) built-in DRM, so you could record digitally from a CD or read-only minidisc to a writeable minidisc, but not then from writeable minidisc->minidisc. Even recording from analogue to minidisc resulted in something that would be restricted.
But this is all just rehashing things that have been talked about many times over the intervening years. They were great, but they never quite made it and then mp3 ate its lunch.
Comment by jansan 1 day ago
Comment by toast0 1 day ago
Comment by sceptic123 22 hours ago
Comment by pkulak 1 day ago
Comment by jll29 22 hours ago
corpus => corpora
thesaurus => thesauri
Emacs => Emacsen
Unix => Unices
Comment by mrexroad 1 day ago
Comment by encom 1 day ago
Comment by kylec 1 day ago
https://www.theverge.com/24295971/we-are-rewind-fiio-cassett...
Comment by mingus88 1 day ago
A review of one unit said that it didn’t honor the cutout tab so if you accidentally pressed record with any tape you would dub over your music
I shopped for a while and came to the conclusion that these are mostly kitsch.
Comment by zoklet-enjoyer 1 day ago
I still play around with tapes at home. I have a modded player with speed controls, a couple of decent tape decks, and a 4 track recorder. I have a couple of loop tapes to play around with too. But yeah, as a portable music format, not sure I want to go back to that.
Comment by 4dregress 1 day ago
Comment by actionfromafar 1 day ago
Comment by NetMageSCW 1 day ago
Comment by cal_dent 1 day ago
Comment by jay_kyburz 1 day ago
Comment by burnt-resistor 1 day ago
Also, it's difficult to top the school bus yellow Walkman Sports photo from Playboy that pretty much crystalized the zeitgeist.
Comment by LargoLasskhyfv 1 day ago
Comment by actionfromafar 1 day ago