Sony MiniDisc: The (Not) Forgotten Audio Format That (Never) Failed

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  • Опубликовано: 24 ноя 2024

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  • @ToiletPlugger
    @ToiletPlugger 3 года назад +2841

    The MiniDisc™ was one of those pieces of tech that actually looked futuristic for it's time. I think they still look cool.

    • @Ben.N
      @Ben.N 3 года назад +34

      Seriously!

    • @thiruknv
      @thiruknv 3 года назад +117

      Not to mention Neo sold his hacked booty stored on a MiniDisc in Matrix.

    • @MultiWirth
      @MultiWirth 3 года назад +42

      it was even featured in Matrix

    • @robspangler6087
      @robspangler6087 3 года назад +32

      It was pretty prominently used in a movie called "Strange Days", too.

    • @georgea.henryjr.5191
      @georgea.henryjr.5191 3 года назад +17

      Corey I agree totally. I recorded some of my 12 inch vinyl onto minidiscs blanks. I still love minidiscs to this day.

  • @herrbasan
    @herrbasan 3 года назад +2244

    I can't help it, MiniDisc feels like the future to me, still.

    • @nickwallette6201
      @nickwallette6201 3 года назад +138

      It's the shiny little disc in the protective case. Growing up on Mission Impossible episodes cemented that kind of thing as equal to "futuristic" in my mind. :-D

    • @herrbasan
      @herrbasan 3 года назад +93

      @@nickwallette6201 Not to forget "Strange Days" and "The Matrix", minidiscs have been in quite a couple of futuristic movies.

    • @kaitlyn__L
      @kaitlyn__L 3 года назад +21

      @@herrbasan also in Interstella 5555!

    • @gustavrsh
      @gustavrsh 3 года назад +142

      There are 1TB micro SD cards, but they don't look nearly as futuristic as MD

    • @jeffholmstrom8713
      @jeffholmstrom8713 3 года назад +1

      Rofl

  • @lordsofkobol7385
    @lordsofkobol7385 2 года назад +594

    Virtually every person I knew who owned a mini disc player would say how great it was for recording their band rehearsals.
    This seemed to be a thing for many years.

    • @djductape
      @djductape 2 года назад +4

      Yep, my first DJ mixtapes were recorded with my MD player in the early 00s.

    • @sectionq1
      @sectionq1 2 года назад +4

      We.toured with it for years, was made for storing sequences etc. So easy to change the set order around.

    • @pauledwards8008
      @pauledwards8008 2 года назад

      Yes the pre recorded albums were very unexciting and flat compressed

    • @richardmh1987
      @richardmh1987 2 года назад +5

      A cousin's husband is a producer and he used to work for a big radio station in late 90´s early 2000's. I remember him carrying many MD with him and he explained to me that the station invested a lot in a MD professional equipments since the quality was almost equal to CD, it occupied less space and editing was very easy so they could get lots of radio shows on them and change the songs order in the middle of the show if needed.

    • @sdemosi
      @sdemosi 2 года назад +2

      Yep, they made a great printable recording system. I loved my minidisc player. It was my favorite thing until I got an ipod and realised I could fit my entire recording connection on it.

  • @bradavon
    @bradavon 10 месяцев назад +369

    For those of us old enough to remember portable CD players skipping all the time, Minidisc was a revolution in portable music.

    • @JohnZombi88
      @JohnZombi88 10 месяцев назад +11

      Even the cheaper (than the alternative) car stereo CDplayers of the day skipped. Used to hate it driving in my old F-150. Any slight bump and the CD skipped.

    • @aprofondir
      @aprofondir 9 месяцев назад +16

      I mean, you had Discman players with buffers so CDs stopped skipping eventually.

    • @syrus3k
      @syrus3k 7 месяцев назад +8

      I loved minidisc. It was far more versatile than cd, more fun and just cool

    • @aaronb7990
      @aaronb7990 7 месяцев назад +6

      Lol, I remember finally getting a portable CD player and then buying a sick new portable Cassette Player to actually use on the Go. I left the Portable CD player hooked to the home stereo where I made mix tapes from CDs.

    • @wesdizz6297
      @wesdizz6297 6 месяцев назад +7

      @@aprofondir The buffer helped, but they still skipped if you did any sort of activity with them. I remember trying to mow my lawn while listening to a CD, but it was super annoying.

  • @leokimvideo
    @leokimvideo 2 года назад +354

    Ive got a minidisc player / recorder. The huge problem with the format was simple. The price. To buy the media it cost a bomb. Every time Sony tries to corner a marketplace with their tech it seems to always end in a train wreck

    • @jonthurmond1245
      @jonthurmond1245 2 года назад +28

      Came here to say this. I remember buying my first player @ 11 or 12, because the propriety patent was finally lifted. I bought a Sharp player/recorder. I remember someone in an electronics store explaining how VHS was inferior to Beta, but VHS blew up because there was not a Sony patent on it. Interesting how they tried to squeeze so hard, that the ended up not getting good tech in the hands of more consumers.

    • @daggern15
      @daggern15 Год назад +26

      It's a pattern of theirs. The same problem occurred with UMD and the Vita memory cards. I can't say much on the subject of the Vita cards but their tech nearly always has something that makes them better than the competitor but the price is always so prohibitively high that they ultimately fail to sell. I, like many people, like to think we're willing to spend that bit more for better quality but circumstances rarely allow for that mentality so cheaper wins more often than not.
      And it's a shame really because I still think MD is a better media storage platform than CD.

    • @itsAphelion.
      @itsAphelion. Год назад +23

      Sony pushed people to mod the psp and vita just so we can use standard micro sd cards instead of their proprietary memory🤠

    • @___KaH0tika___
      @___KaH0tika___ Год назад +7

      compared to other alternatives it really was not expensive!

    • @F1GHTstick
      @F1GHTstick Год назад +6

      Have you heard of BluRay discs?

  • @just_passing_through
    @just_passing_through Год назад +91

    Minidisc will always hold a special place in my heart. I still have my component recording deck, my NetMD portable recorder/player, and a player in my car. I was an early adopter, and I refuse to say goodbye.

    • @fubufb420
      @fubufb420 29 дней назад

      I gotta get a deck...And a player...🎉😂
      Only have the discs...😢

  • @paulmartin7241
    @paulmartin7241 2 года назад +361

    I invested heavily in MD , as I thought it was a great replacement for the compact cassette and even the CD , I've had a MD player in my car for the last 20 years, and it still works OK and I use it daily , and I have two hi-fi system MD players/recorders & a portable MD Walkman and they all still work OK.
    Most of my LP's & CD's have been put on to MD too. I was said to see the format die

    • @jasonmartin7137
      @jasonmartin7137 2 года назад +14

      I bought a MD player for my truck in 1994. We were into the minitruckin' stuff, so it was cool to have a stereo that didn't skip like cd's did. lol. I had to drive over an hour into Dallas to find the discs, so it got tiresome of listening to the same songs over and over. I traded it to a friend and that ended my run with mini discs. That's cool that you still have some of them. I thought the format had died decades ago.

    • @kinkane5566
      @kinkane5566 2 года назад +7

      @@jasonmartin7137 Shout out to DFW!

    • @jasonmartin7137
      @jasonmartin7137 2 года назад +2

      @@kinkane5566 Hell yeah!

    • @allenlark
      @allenlark 2 года назад +3

      unless you are single handedly keeping it alive for yourself

    • @the.communist
      @the.communist 2 года назад +14

      @@jasonmartin7137 listening to a song over n over is how you appreciate music. Nowdays music is like toilet paper. Disposable after a couple of listens.

  • @BrendanMacWade
    @BrendanMacWade Год назад +173

    I like to think of the MiniDisc as the ultimate physical, digital mixtape. The ability to move, rename, add and delete tracks was a game changer. It was my favorite physical audio media by far. A friend visited Japan in 1999 and noticed that virtually everyone had a CD deck connected to a MiniDisc recording desk connected with a toslink optical cable. Salarypeople would make mixes and take discs with them on the go for all those train rides. I decided to do the same in NYC. I got a Tascam MD recording deck and a couple of super small Sony portable players. The MiniDisc was my source of mobile music entertainment until music apps supported lossless (FLAC) downloads in the 2010s (so I skipped the whole iPod era). I miss my MD hardware.

    • @FoxRivers778
      @FoxRivers778 9 месяцев назад +2

      The Tascam MD decks are higher quality than Sony, and although more expensive it was worth it. I have one Tascam deck that outlasted several Sony models.

    • @etiennejulius1179
      @etiennejulius1179 7 месяцев назад

      I still have my Sony MD 😊

    • @GanymedeXD
      @GanymedeXD 26 дней назад

      ⁠@@FoxRivers778What did you do with the Sony decks? Despite heavy use my first Sony Deck is still fully functional and it was no pro deck, only the budget model. To compare consumer budget decks to Tascam as lets say budget professional hardware makes no real sense … do not assume you were referring to Sony’s 3000£ pro decks. The cutting studio that I used back then had five Sony pro decks … they never broke down till they were retired.

  • @NotJustBikes
    @NotJustBikes 2 года назад +679

    This was a great trip down memory lane. I used minidiscs extensively in the late 90s when I was a DJ. We used to bring a recording unit with us to raves and clubs to record sets, and the editing functions made it possible to generate a clean mix that could be used as a master to press CDs. I also had a portable unit to listen to music on the go.
    It really was a great format for the time, though the copyright limitations were a real pain in the ass. Because the minidiscs (even ones you record yourself) don't allow digital copies due to the copy protection features, I wasn't able to make lossless copies of my mixes until just last year when used high-end units finally dropped enough in price.
    Unfortunately about half of my minidiscs were unreadable by then. So yeah. I have a love/hate relationship with this format, and SONY in general.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo 2 года назад +32

      Unreadable? Sounds like machine, not disc, failure - minidiscs are magneto-optical discs, which are damned near indestructible. (They’re nothing like CD-R, whose dyes can degrade.) I’ve never had one fail, and I’ve been using them since 1997.

    • @NotJustBikes
      @NotJustBikes 2 года назад +19

      @@tookitogo well, about half of them are unreadable and I've tried 3 different machines, so I think that self-recorded minidiscs *can* fail.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo 2 года назад +15

      @@NotJustBikes That’s very, very odd! They have an overwhelming reputation for reliability, which is expected from the technology used.
      Can the unreadable discs be reformatted and recorded, or are they fully dead??

    • @alexdcpe
      @alexdcpe 2 года назад +32

      weird crossover seeing you here

    • @BernieSanders-bn5dk
      @BernieSanders-bn5dk 2 года назад +12

      @@NotJustBikes I love your videos.

  • @OneEightZero180
    @OneEightZero180 3 года назад +377

    The footage you’ve captured for this episode has been such a nostalgia trip. Excellent work.

    • @lutello3012
      @lutello3012 3 года назад +2

      Should have shown the product placement in Last Action Hero.

    • @dazednconfused31337
      @dazednconfused31337 3 года назад +1

      I had a Sharp MT15 replaced under warranty for an SR70 in high school. I bought Oasis & NTWICM! from Dixons and copied Linkin Park from someone's CD. Though I recorded a lot from MTV Rocks on our Sky TV box and from Napster via dialup.
      I remember playing a rude Tom Green song to some girls :) A friend wanted to swap it for his Thomson Lyra 32 Mb MP3 player. A poor choice compared to the 8 disc wallet in my backpack.
      I remember he ran off once with my Motorola Startac 50 from my easily accessible belt clip haha.

    • @vitaliy4244
      @vitaliy4244 Год назад

      ​@@dazednconfused31337HD-DVD ???❤ DVD-RAM ???

  • @terminalfx
    @terminalfx 3 года назад +282

    Everyone I know that owned a MD player, including myself, loved the format. Judging by the comments here, most people felt that way as well.

    • @firun2635
      @firun2635 3 года назад +3

      Same. It was seriously amazing at the time and I liked it very much.

    • @Outland9000
      @Outland9000 3 года назад +5

      It was just... Cool. I still have mine somewhere along with all the ripped disks.

    • @tubelious
      @tubelious 3 года назад +2

      I only upgraded from MD, when the 3rd gen iPod with 40Gb arrived.

    • @mystixa
      @mystixa 3 года назад +5

      Yea was a great format. Was just killed by Sony's bad decisions around DRM and lack of computer integration in the times before mp3 players were affordable.

    • @Outland9000
      @Outland9000 3 года назад +3

      @@mystixa Found my old Sony MZR 55. It still works after not seeing the light of day in almost 20 years. Turns out my minidisc collection included some really rare white labels.

  • @johnmichaelrichards
    @johnmichaelrichards Год назад +36

    I was an early adopter of MiniDisc. First I had a Sharp portable recorder for recording radio interviews. I then had a number of high-end Sony 19" Hi-Fi units and also in 1996 an in-car Sony MiniDisc head unit with multi-CD changer. I progessed to NetMD and Hi-MD.
    Today, MiniDisc remains my preferred recording medium.

  • @Morbid0007
    @Morbid0007 2 года назад +332

    I really liked MiniDisc. I loved the ability to add, delete, label and reorder tracks. I had a shelf unit, several portable players/recorders and a MiniDisc player in my car. Fun fact: In 'The Matrix,' Neo sold his software on MiniDisc media.

    • @jamesslick4790
      @jamesslick4790 Год назад +15

      Are you from the US? If so, You are the OTHER guy, besides me who had MiniDisc in his car! I knew NO ONE else who did. (I know it was a "thing" in Japan, of course.) I loved the format!

    • @gerboog
      @gerboog Год назад +6

      Originally from Germany and my dad had this! 😁✌️

    • @halfamic
      @halfamic Год назад +5

      @@jamesslick4790 I am another guy who had a MD player in the car

    • @Phoenix135tube
      @Phoenix135tube Год назад +2

      I also really like Minidisc although I have only recently (within the last six months) discovered it. I also have a Sony minidisk portable recorder, a Sony Shelf Unit (CD, MD, Cassette, Radio) and an Alpine Car Deck (CD, MD, Radio).

    • @jamesslick4790
      @jamesslick4790 Год назад +1

      @@Phoenix135tube Cool! Keep this medium alive!

  • @abunk8691
    @abunk8691 3 года назад +75

    Your coverage of the MiniDisc just wowed me with that level of detail to the point of even covering rival media and the whole rise of MiniDisc to the present

  • @Techmoan
    @Techmoan 3 года назад +2988

    Thanks for making this great video.

    • @babyboomertwerkteam5662
      @babyboomertwerkteam5662 3 года назад +54

      hi techmoan

    • @rydlescrie5043
      @rydlescrie5043 3 года назад +68

      Love you, Techmoan. Your retrospective on minidisc is also great. All of your videos are great for that matter

    • @NicMediaDesign
      @NicMediaDesign 3 года назад +27

      Love your Sony related videos Techmoan. You always manage to show how innovative Sony was and is.

    • @thatmatt41
      @thatmatt41 3 года назад +11

      hey techmoan

    • @fiddledotgoth
      @fiddledotgoth 3 года назад +16

      End of this video is interesting, but does beg the question; if minidiscs are getting popular again, why wouldn't Sony continue making discs, and maybe even a new player/recorder again...?

  • @mgpBLARG
    @mgpBLARG Год назад +88

    The Japanese exchange student that stayed with my family had a minidisc player, and at the time, that was the coolest thing I had ever seen.

    • @sebastian3004
      @sebastian3004 7 месяцев назад +9

      I brought very thin cd player to school in 2002 and American students freaked out. lol

    • @hodun8
      @hodun8 4 месяца назад +1

      Same here but with the cassette walkman. Japan had those cool all metal EX series walkmans that were almost as small as a cassette tape and here in the states we had those chunky plastic models. When a Japanese exchange student brought one over my mind was blown

    • @Tryh4rd3rr
      @Tryh4rd3rr 3 месяца назад +2

      In the 80s, Japan > US

    • @fantasmatice999
      @fantasmatice999 2 месяца назад +1

      @@Tryh4rd3rr That's still the case

  • @RedMageGaming
    @RedMageGaming 3 года назад +301

    I miss my old MD player. Ran on a single AA battery for half of forever.

    • @marcuslittle8049
      @marcuslittle8049 3 года назад +4

      I wish I still had mine too!

    • @aslerunarborgersen5175
      @aslerunarborgersen5175 3 года назад +14

      I still have mine, just love it. I especiall use on long plane travels, one small battery last the whole journey from Norway to Thailand (I am married to a thai woman) - it takes about 11 hours, and I have all my favourite music on the discs i bring with me. I also have a bigger minidisc player/recorder in my stereo-rack.

    • @RedMageGaming
      @RedMageGaming 3 года назад +3

      @@aslerunarborgersen5175 so jelly!

    • @SeanMarsalis
      @SeanMarsalis 3 года назад +4

      For the longest I thought I was the only one who remembered these things. It really felt like it would never get better than being able to stop carrying a CD case to school and have a few disks with a ton of totally not pirated music.

    • @RedMageGaming
      @RedMageGaming 3 года назад +1

      @Mark P. I just wish they improved on the format as a data disk. With current blue ray density and the MD form factor we would have really durable mini magneto optical diskettes

  • @AutistCat
    @AutistCat 3 года назад +263

    This has got to be the definitive MD documentary on RUclips now. Not even the Techmoan one is this good.

    • @IamWhoIam2023
      @IamWhoIam2023 3 года назад +41

      I'm gonna tell techmoan on you 🤭🤭

    • @Kevinb1821
      @Kevinb1821 3 года назад +2

      How was this comment 3 days ago?

    • @Ravenesque
      @Ravenesque 3 года назад +4

      @@Kevinb1821 Patreon!

    • @Dedubya-
      @Dedubya- 3 года назад +6

      @@Kevinb1821 time travel, clear evidence right here.

    • @BronsonTheCat
      @BronsonTheCat 3 года назад +1

      Now you’re sounding like the green muppet!

  • @WrinkleRelease
    @WrinkleRelease 3 года назад +190

    That was a terrific program. Professionally narrated, edited and nicely researched. Thanks for this!

    • @martinmuldoon603
      @martinmuldoon603 3 года назад +3

      absolutely brilliant info, I must have been sleeping through all them years of MD. I remember MD was offered as a new car option in 1998

  • @DerekT860
    @DerekT860 Год назад +15

    I had a jvc portable minidisc back in 2000. Greatest player I ever owned. Could record from almost any source with the laser input or 3.5 mm Jack. It was easy to organize files and rearrange them. Could record multiple albums on 1 disk and the nest feature was the headphones. Could change tracks and view titles right on the headphones without even using the player itself. It was YEARS ahead of its time.

  • @mauricebanen6555
    @mauricebanen6555 3 года назад +166

    I do have a minidisc and it's still great after all those years.
    Great sound,small and it still works perfectly after two decades.

    • @chay3003
      @chay3003 2 года назад +3

      Yep! Me too.

    • @Zimmy_1981
      @Zimmy_1981 2 года назад +5

      Same, I have a MDS-JE510 that I am using as I type this, main use is as a DAC but I pop in a disc once in a while for casual or ambient music listening. Great video & thanks

    • @CanyonWanderer
      @CanyonWanderer 2 года назад +1

      @@Zimmy_1981 Ha!, I have the exact same model, must have had that for at least 22 years

    • @Zimmy_1981
      @Zimmy_1981 2 года назад +3

      @@CanyonWanderer *awesome* buddy! Waw thst is hella long, I only have mine about 3 years or so, bought it used,no regrets

    • @djsoulfilter
      @djsoulfilter 2 года назад +1

      Same here. Still have a working portable mini-disc player/recorder.

  • @flutechannel
    @flutechannel 3 года назад +440

    I love my MD player, still use it to record masterclasses. The audio quality is incredible!

    • @chuheihkg
      @chuheihkg 3 года назад +6

      Whatever the media is, Even a radio station still relies on the M.O disk and needed software.

    • @Robert08010
      @Robert08010 3 года назад +26

      My favorite feature is the long recording times you get when you put it in mono mode. I used to record a lot of lectures and mono is ideal for them.

    • @David.L291
      @David.L291 3 года назад +26

      it's ridiculous how this wasn't far more successful, I had a mini disk player but sadly I had to part with it, I needed money at the time :( but in my view the mini disk turned out to be even better than the CD and tapes, so sad it didn't really take a hold that long

    • @jejednb
      @jejednb 3 года назад +2

      @@Robert08010 thx for tips !

    • @paulbalogh4582
      @paulbalogh4582 3 года назад +2

      You got that right. AMAZING!

  • @prutser67
    @prutser67 3 года назад +69

    As a former Sony employee during the period of the 'rise' and 'fall' of the Minidic, I can say it is quite a nice overview.

    • @JonathanRichardsonUK
      @JonathanRichardsonUK 3 года назад +8

      How was it watching 'Minidic' rise and fall :D

    • @smudger671
      @smudger671 3 года назад +4

      Sony's marketing was poor which was one of the reasons it failed. I still use mine as a replacement for cassette which is very inferior.

    • @MilanFourTimesEight
      @MilanFourTimesEight 2 года назад +2

      @@smudger671 NetMD was poor as you couldn't transfer your own recordings as mp3 to the computer. Whats the point then?

    • @EliFleming
      @EliFleming Год назад +1

      @@JonathanRichardsonUK some say it was more of a “shrink” 😂

  • @shackusratus
    @shackusratus Год назад +57

    Been in Japan since '91. Owned almost all of this stuff at one time or another. Making the switch from cassetes to MDs, not really ever getting into CDs, renting music from Tsutaya etc. This was pretty nostalgic for me.

    • @hardtymz2517
      @hardtymz2517 Год назад +1

      you never experienced good SQ then. CD's are STILL legit. minidiscs were cassette quality/mp3.

    • @M364A
      @M364A Год назад

      @@hardtymz2517 i listen to 320KBIT mp3s and they are fine for my ears

    • @Vespyr_
      @Vespyr_ 10 месяцев назад +1

      Compact Disc audio is just so sublime.

    • @RE4PER
      @RE4PER 9 месяцев назад +1

      @@hardtymz2517 Minidiscs are significantly better than mp3 or cassette quality. Wtf are you on about.

  • @ruckdog
    @ruckdog 3 года назад +79

    One of the kids in my Scout troop had a MD player in the 90s, when most of us still had tape players. When we saw what it could do (sound quality, song skipping, small size, etc), we all wanted it! While MD might not have become the dominant format, it definitely helped to set expectations for what the next generation of music players had to be.

    • @hardtymz2517
      @hardtymz2517 Год назад +3

      no scout troop kid could afford one of those back then! drug dealer??

  • @josexavierjr.5633
    @josexavierjr.5633 3 года назад +162

    I still love MiniDisc; I'm an avid user of them today to record LPs to extend their life, as I did with cassettes in the 70's and 80's. Great to record live music too! Thanks for this video.

    • @JCNOAOU
      @JCNOAOU 3 года назад +1

      Nice how would you record to them today? You found away to hook up to your computer?

    • @josexavierjr.5633
      @josexavierjr.5633 3 года назад +6

      @@JCNOAOU You can record from your computer through a DAC, then into the MiniDisc recorder……

    • @Geflechtmeister
      @Geflechtmeister 3 года назад +7

      I searched at that time for a good quality RECORDER to record sounds outside. You couldn't use the telephone to record things in high quality. And cassette recorder was very poor quality. So MD was the right thing to go with

    • @modelq68
      @modelq68 3 года назад +1

      Does anyone know where I can pick a mini disc player/recorder. Portable or deck

    • @isaacyn8256
      @isaacyn8256 3 года назад +5

      @@modelq68 You are a little late in the game, a decade ago, people were literally giving them away for free! Now everyone wants $400+ minimum.

  • @MatthewOfLondon
    @MatthewOfLondon 2 года назад +164

    Observations and Notes:
    1. I really thought Minidiscs were the future, and my friends and I agreed that eventually they would hold films and music videos.
    2. I loved all the different colours they came in.
    3. I have always refused to get rid of my player, discs and blank disks, although I often scratch my head as to what use I can put them to now.
    4. Yes, Format Wars are so boring and jade the pallet of the consumer.
    5. I must congratulate this channel on it's excellent, well produced content. ❤❤

    • @claudemir6801
      @claudemir6801 Год назад +1

      Parabéns a vocês, por te feito parte deste tempo bom.

    • @slayerized27
      @slayerized27 Год назад +6

      Eventually they did, in the form of sony's psp game system. The disks were the same size. I bought allot of movies on that format.

    • @hardtymz2517
      @hardtymz2517 Год назад +1

      you and your friends musta been rich cats. ain't no one could afford that knarly sht back then. and it was a bad CD, with its weird lossy quality. it was literally OG mp3. and people paid a ton of money for it?? naw. (read in Rick Ro$$ voice) you and friends done tripped up.

    • @jeffchastain2977
      @jeffchastain2977 Год назад +1

      I still use 2 mini-disc home decks and a portable mini-disc recorder. I record concerts with a mini stereo mike and my Sony Recording Walkman. I use the home decks to listen to my recordings and pre-recorded discs, and if my friends get CDs and have one that they particularly like, I borrow it and dub it to mini-disc, not usually to keep, but to see if I like it, and if I CAN find it on CD,( I have large CD and vinyl record collections and if I like music, I collect physical copies because one day streaming services might go broke or start doing large scale withdrawal of your favorite music from their services. Look at the fine print in your streaming service agreement and they do retain that right, EVEN if you have paid for the music.) and if not, then to either keep on MD or to record over if I dont care for it. Basically, I use it like I used my Nakamichi cassette recorder to record record albums(vinyl and later, CDS) for use in the car and when walking around in my Walkman, and evaluation of records recommended to me by friends. Those needs have not dissipated over the years as I am kind of a music freak. If you ever do decide to get rid of your equipment and discs, let me know.

    • @batmandestroys1978
      @batmandestroys1978 Год назад +2

      I copy CDs to mini disk, including vinyl records, I source from my Library and friends! I have had CDs which have failed in the past and vinyl records which have been scratched. My mini disk player, and disks after 30 years still plays perfectly!

  • @b0tterman
    @b0tterman Год назад +24

    We used these as cheap alternatives to record audio for filmmaking. This was a fantastic format.

  • @HeathInHeath
    @HeathInHeath 3 года назад +129

    The irony of a lossy recording format being an impediment to adoption of the minidisc while the mp3 eventually prevented minidisc with lossless recording from market success is remarkable. An excellent review of a well executed product that can only be described as a successful failure.

    • @robspangler6087
      @robspangler6087 3 года назад +7

      In my view, they shot themselves in the foot when they did "net-md", which converted your majorly lossy mp3 files into larger lossy files instead of just putting them on the damn disc as is, while saying on the box that it "plays mp3 files". Which is kinda like saying that a cassette recorder can play CD's.

    • @ShaneSimmons
      @ShaneSimmons 3 года назад +2

      It was another MDCT codec hampered by being proprietary and tied to a physical format. Fraunhofer was content to make money off of companies that wanted legit codecs for MP3. Plus MiniDisc was in audiophile price range but audiophiles hate lossy compression.

    • @highks496
      @highks496 2 года назад +3

      The problem was that MD was relatively pricey while being lower quality than CD. The kids didn't buy it because it was expensive, and the audiophiles didn't buy it because it was too compressed. Mp3 caught on because it was cheap from the beginning, and it was also open to become better over time because it wasn't a fixed format like MD.

    • @DarylO
      @DarylO 2 года назад +1

      @@robspangler6087 Yes, that was TOTALLY stupid!! Also, their naming of the ATRAC algorithm was quite unfortunate, as A-TRAC sounded too much like 8-Track. Psychologically, they were transmitting a negative message to consumers that this format was not going to stick around!

    • @robsolf
      @robsolf 2 года назад

      @@DarylO LOL! All us old farts would be listening to an MD, waiting for a song to fade out, hear a click, and fade in, again. :)

  • @richterbelmont2544
    @richterbelmont2544 2 года назад +59

    Aside from vinyl, Mini Disc is my favorite physical audio format. Loved my portable MD player in the early 00's. A single AA battery would provide many hours of music before needing a replacement during family trips, making it cost effective. A 4 pack of AAs would be vital during those summers.

    • @EggTamago7
      @EggTamago7 Год назад +3

      This is a good point. By the time NetMD players came around one AA could approach 60 hours of playtime if you used LP4!

  • @Exarian
    @Exarian 3 года назад +48

    God, I've always said that minidisc felt like everything good about cassette tapes but distilled into an ideal form. I'm glad I'm not the only one to notice that comparison.

  • @emmetgibson6599
    @emmetgibson6599 9 месяцев назад +4

    This is a remarkably high level of detail in such a short documentary piece! Thank you!

  • @shadowside8433
    @shadowside8433 3 года назад +69

    My minidisk was simply the best format I've ever had. I loved my MD player for portable audio.
    I used to sit on a train with about 20 minidisks, each with two or three albums on them. It made the long journey just fly by!

    • @jimmynich4791
      @jimmynich4791 3 года назад +4

      I had one, the sound was very good and could record.

    • @vitorfernandes651
      @vitorfernandes651 3 года назад +1

      Nonsense. It was amazing for it’s time. I loved mine, I remember, as a teen it took me forever to save for one which was around 500 dollars on sale. It was great.
      But things are way better now, as a matter of fact I have a Walkman with a 400gb card and all my music in Flac or Alac. All with album covers.
      Sound is much better
      Device is much smaller
      Sd card for way more music
      Way easier to put music on it

    • @highks496
      @highks496 2 года назад

      @@vitorfernandes651 My music library at home is all FLAC as well, but I just put it on my phone in 256 kbit/s AAC for listening on the go. It costs basically nothing (because I have the phone anyways) and the 256 kbit/s AAC is absolutely good enough for listening in the car or with mobile headphones. There's no comparison to the expensive and chunky devices you needed in the past for portable music.

  • @jaydutta7711
    @jaydutta7711 3 года назад +112

    I have never use or buy a Mini disc to play music in my life, and this video still made me sad, specially when Mini disc gotten replaced by the iPod even after trying so hard against it's previous competitors to hold it's ground on the market. I know it's just a disk, but I felt a bit sad for it :(

    • @trumpeterjones6638
      @trumpeterjones6638 3 года назад +5

      I loved the tactile nature of it. You could have a few in the pockets.

    • @twt2718
      @twt2718 3 года назад +13

      As a kid in the 90’s....I had a mini-disc and thought it was the most awesome thing. It sounded much better than cassettes and didn’t skip like “disc-man” CD players. RIP mini-disc

    • @talisikid1618
      @talisikid1618 3 года назад +8

      I lived that era. It always intrigued me but could never afford them. Remembered all those formats & the record companies messing it all up.

    • @mrsuperheatran2794
      @mrsuperheatran2794 3 года назад +3

      Am I the only one that never had any mini discs outside of Gamecube games?

    • @lordchikage9015
      @lordchikage9015 3 года назад +2

      No need to be sad, Sony made quadrillion dollars with Blu-ray and gaming software + selling parts to basically the biggest tech companies in the world^^. They have 200B in assets alone. Sony also won the fight vs HD DVD soo yeah

  • @thelateraledge
    @thelateraledge 2 года назад +72

    "Track Mark" was a great feature of the mini disc. This allowed you to split an audio file with the click of one button. I listened to a lot of DJ mixes and this allowed you to split the mix up into separate tracks. This was an amazing feature in a time where the only way to navigate long mixes was to literally hold down forwards or backward until you got to your desired location.

    • @thelateraledge
      @thelateraledge 2 года назад +4

      @Sister Mary Clements maybe it was a feature only on certain models but mine which was a sony it was located on the front panel and titled (T. Mark)

    • @geneconnelly3852
      @geneconnelly3852 2 года назад +11

      MD was a very useful format. You could also remove Track marks to combine tracks. Once I literally track marked a song and lifted the second chorus and moved it to the end of the 1st verse. Incredibly bulletproof format as well. I work as a live sound engineer and this was vastly more flexible than DAT and way more reliable than MP3. Great to record on live too. I never a once had a glitched recording on MD.

    • @debsmcd6
      @debsmcd6 2 года назад +5

      I used that feature too on my minidisc recordings! It was a great feature. I still have all my discs and players.

    • @Nehesi
      @Nehesi 2 года назад +2

      I've been looking for a similar feature to this with .mp3 - is there a software put there that does this WITHOUT an audible? I've got stuff that will split mp3s into tracks, but every player program I put it into has an audible bump or slight pause switching between tracks.

    • @thelateraledge
      @thelateraledge 2 года назад +1

      @@Nehesi You'd probably need some kind of software which allows you to set the fade in and fade out amount. If you split audio without a fade in and fade out amount, you will get an audible click or pop where you have cut the audio. The solution is to add a small fade in and out point, I'm talking like milliseconds or less, this will remove the pop and the listener won't be able to pick up on the fades as they are too quick to be audible.

  • @dionst.michael1482
    @dionst.michael1482 Год назад +16

    I had a portable Sony minidisk recorder that I used to record my bands practices and the sound quality was quite literally AMAZING! I combined the unit with a Sony stereo microphone for recording purposes. I bought 2 of themover the course of a couple of years cause I used to take it to work and it they took quite a bit of accidental abuse. I wish I still owned one. It would literally record a pin dropping.

    • @al1976-v7m
      @al1976-v7m Год назад +1

      I had the same equipment. The small Sony condensor microphone delivered superb recording quality.

  • @diangara3298
    @diangara3298 3 года назад +30

    Every gig and concert I went to back in the day I had my MD and stereo mic up my sleeve. I remember leaving concerts and listening to them on the way home. They were also great for multitrack recording before computers made it possible at home. I used to use a minidisc and stereo VCR with metal tape running through my old 8 track mixing desk to layer tracks one at a time. Years of fun and creativity.

  • @lowdesertpunk
    @lowdesertpunk 2 года назад +108

    Thanks for the history lesson! This led me to digging out my old portable MD recorder. In it was a disc with 20 year old recordings of me jamming with a friend. I remember recording it with a cheap mono microphone or even headphones plugged into the mic port at times. Great memories. I couldn't have done this with CD and I doubt it would have lasted so long on MC.

    • @tedgunderson67
      @tedgunderson67 2 года назад +6

      I lucked out, found five or six blanks and one that’s crammed with tunes from middle school, quality is great and the build quality of the damn thing is still impressive.

    • @williamsburgasylum
      @williamsburgasylum 2 года назад +7

      I dug out my old MD recorder last year, just in time to hear the recording I made of the Brood X 17-year cicadas in the Eastern US last time they were around (2004), right before they returned in 2021.

    • @18percentphotographer
      @18percentphotographer 2 года назад +1

      That was me and my friends as well! Still have dozens of MD’s with us jamming on them. I still remember buying the recorder package from Guitar Center, it came with a stereo mic that you plugged into the recorder.

    • @danw5785
      @danw5785 2 года назад +1

      Was so useful doing recordings. Couldnt believe it when it ended. Then I had loads of recordings in their locked format.

    • @evertonporter7887
      @evertonporter7887 2 года назад

      I use to record the music from late night Pages From Ceefax onto minidisc years ago. I had so much fun with the format, and would carry my MD player with me everywhere.

  • @syn010110
    @syn010110 3 года назад +139

    god I miss this format so much. there's just something special about the tactility of physical media, especially clicky-thunky formats like MD. the sound of the player popping open, the disc slotting in and the loading mechanism snapping shut was just fantastic.
    listening to music on my phone is convenient as hell but it feels a little soulless.

    • @redcatchem2345
      @redcatchem2345 3 года назад +14

      mediums having physical value/enjoyment are sorta why vynal is still around. >_> Minidisk would almost be worth the dystopic-future that would necessitate its existence/use.

    • @indigocloud8408
      @indigocloud8408 3 года назад +14

      Holy shit I couldn't have said it better, Minidiscs look straight out of a futuristic 80's anime movie.

    • @GonParan
      @GonParan 3 года назад +2

      I wish there was a way to ad BT functionality to the old MD players

    • @lemons2300
      @lemons2300 3 года назад +1

      I feel the same way with the PSP. I've always found them to be quite similar (unsurprisingly)

    • @auxmike718
      @auxmike718 3 года назад +2

      You nailed it! There’s no magic in streaming music!

  • @DatGrackle
    @DatGrackle Месяц назад

    I HAVE BEEN LOOK8NG FOR THE VIDEO FOR ABOUT 3 YEARS!!! I had randomly watched it one day of being my recommended feed and only got half way through. I went to tell family and friends about it but no one really knew what I was talking about. I recently found ANOTHER video on your channel and have been binge watching all of your retro tech. THANK YOU for making content for things like this it really helps with learning about new and old computing and inspired me to go to school for engineering technology. 😊

  • @hs7921
    @hs7921 3 года назад +41

    I had one of these. I created my own music discs, and would edit on the go as well. It’s all been replaced by my phone, but I thought this was the greatest invention ever.

  • @RedNocturne
    @RedNocturne 3 года назад +64

    I loved my minidisc player in middle school. When Sony introduced their atrac3plus format, I went nuts putting dozens of songs on a single minidisc lp

    • @davefish2280
      @davefish2280 3 года назад +1

      Sadly by then ATRAC was a poor couisin to the vastly more popular MP3 format.

  • @kraquin
    @kraquin 3 года назад +77

    I was living in Japan when the MD came out and I still have some along with a portable player. I had a MD player in my car that you could load 3 MD's in and a unit in my home to record with. Great format and was very useful at the time.

    • @antilogism
      @antilogism 3 года назад +2

      The size and enclosed format always seemed like a natural for a dash unit but I never saw one in California.

    • @josephbolton5199
      @josephbolton5199 3 года назад

      A buddy of mine got one for free. His uncle what's a car dealership and a Pro snowboarder return to lease vehicle with a bunch of aftermarket stereo equipment in it

    • @Pe6ek
      @Pe6ek 3 года назад +2

      MDs, not MD's.

    • @glennoc8585
      @glennoc8585 2 года назад

      Same i was there too. Huge amount of choice for car stereo and portable. I used to be fascinated in Japan by the phones then too as it was years ahead of everywhere really. I remember seeing the first Bluray players in Akihabara and Sato Musen and Bic Camera. Not the same now though over there it's pretty much as anywhere now if not behind what you see in Shenzhen or Seoul sad to say.

  • @jtmichaelson
    @jtmichaelson Год назад +4

    My God, I miss Mini-Discs. In radio we used them for commercials in place of the old carts, and we'd record phone calls and bits and skits for on-air play. They were amazing. I had TONS of MDs on hand at home and work.

  • @jordanhorst6
    @jordanhorst6 3 года назад +188

    man...mixtapes, walkmans, limewire... this makes me nostalgic.

    • @RIZFERD
      @RIZFERD 3 года назад +1

      kazza, etc plus windows messenger, yahoo messenger

    • @ADeeSHUPA
      @ADeeSHUPA 3 года назад

      @@RIZFERD Indonesian

    • @RIZFERD
      @RIZFERD 3 года назад

      @@ADeeSHUPA heah6 but I lived aeound the world ij my own alone since childhood

    • @davidbee3704
      @davidbee3704 3 года назад +1

      Napster

    • @XBullitt16X
      @XBullitt16X 3 года назад +3

      Right ? I'm a 90s kid and this gives me nostalgia haha

  • @needtoknowvideo5593
    @needtoknowvideo5593 2 года назад +43

    As a live and studio engineer in the 2000's, I used MD HEAVILY! I loved it for all of the reasons mentioned in the video, but mostly for its stability. Virtually no crashes. I even owned a Yamaha MD8. MD deck and cart style players were common place in fixed install theaters. I would take two on the road with me when i would tour, a primary and a back up, running simultaneously. Good days.

    • @fedgeno
      @fedgeno 2 года назад

      Used to use these in the studio as well

    • @johnsean100
      @johnsean100 2 года назад +2

      They still are used...the world moves towards flac and wav, but players still have problems - bitrates, versions, card formats, drive file systems, you never know if it will work if you don't have your own equipment...with other formats it's even worse.

  • @j.lindback
    @j.lindback 3 года назад +46

    MiniDisc was the format that actually made recording and listening _fun_! Unlike cassettes it sounded good, and unlike mp3 players it felt like I was being part of the process. Well-researched and well-made, it was a pleasure to watch!

    • @mikelovesbacon
      @mikelovesbacon 3 года назад +1

      Fun? Did you ever use Sonicstage? It was a chore. It was slow and buggy and transferring music to Minidisc took forever. I regretted buying my Minidisc player because of Sonicstage.

    • @j.lindback
      @j.lindback 3 года назад +1

      @@mikelovesbacon I actually never had a NetMD, so I recorded all my discs much like you would record a cassette tape. I however used Sonic Stage for making Atrac3-CD:s, and it worked fine for me (but it might have been a different program than the NetMD one).

    • @kilrahvp
      @kilrahvp 3 года назад

      Sonicstage is fine, of course it was a bit slower to copy than an MP3 player but still faster compared to recording from analog. Although I guess conversion times that are minimal now might have been a bit longer on a celeron back then... BTW with HiMD the transfer is a LOT faster.

  • @philipmccloy6502
    @philipmccloy6502 Год назад +5

    I loved mini disc for recording my numerous cd collection,which I then used in my dj business through the 90,s .They took up less space than cds and the music was easily accessible. Brilliant format for music with great sound quality. Should never have stopped their production. Bring them back.

  • @choimdachoim9491
    @choimdachoim9491 2 года назад +137

    As a Composer and Musician, obtaining one of these recorders and 10 discs in the early 2000's changed my life completely. The quality of the recordings is astounding. My previous recording machine was a Teac 4-track tape-recorder...no comparison in quality, ease of operation, portability, etc. Getting new discs became a problem so I stopped using it. EDIT:. .I went to Google recently and discovered that discs are abundantly available, new and used. Apparently Japan really used this format.

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem 2 года назад

      Both formats failed to become the dominant format.

    • @choimdachoim9491
      @choimdachoim9491 2 года назад +4

      @@markvarley2962 I could, but the question really is "would" I and the answer is "Why would I?" Since completing 5 years of college as a Music Composer major I've spent the last 50 years doing my best to forget everything I was taught about composing. I don't like rigid form, formula music.

    • @Enonymouse_
      @Enonymouse_ 2 года назад +2

      I wasn't able to afford one of these let alone find one in the US until around the time the format had basically died. The portables were really cool though!

    • @choimdachoim9491
      @choimdachoim9491 2 года назад +7

      @@Enonymouse_ I was lucky...I found mine and 10 discs when clearing out the apartment of a deceased friend whose family wanted me to put all his belongings in a dumpster.

    • @Pseudoswede
      @Pseudoswede 2 года назад +1

      If only quality virgin 1/4”, 1/2”, and 2” tape was as abundantly available.
      Sadly, vacuum tubes are becoming as difficult to find.
      I’m even hearing stories of people gutting classic tube amps solely to part them out for the tubes.

  • @thefidgetspinnerofdoom
    @thefidgetspinnerofdoom 3 года назад +79

    Wow, that part about music kiosks where you could buy individual songs was mind-blowing to me, it's like a predecessor to iTunes

    • @treetopjones737
      @treetopjones737 3 года назад +7

      The big change was moving to all songs being sold that way. 45's you could buy the hit song and that way didn't have to pay for an album.

    • @gelinrefira
      @gelinrefira 3 года назад +8

      Yup, the same thing occurs to me. That was a genius way to combat piracy, by making music accessible and cheap enough that the inconvenience of piracy became unattractive. They just didn't understand that the internet is an even more convenient and powerful method to do the same thing.

    • @seattlebeard
      @seattlebeard 3 года назад

      In 2004 Seattle was one of the test market cities for Starbucks' Hear Music kiosks. You could choose from about 200,000 songs. You picked out the songs you wanted from any artist for one dollar a song. When you paid with your credit card, it would burn a cd for you. (Instant cd mixtape!) They provided the blank disk. I saved hundreds of dollars getting back catalogue "greatest hits" from artists I whose albums I would never have purchased. Who needed Napster?

    • @akunbuangan2992
      @akunbuangan2992 3 года назад

      FYI the Independent record label that sold music for Minidisc via Kiosk which is written in the news is avex trax who popularized many Japanese top singers like Ayumi Hamasaki (She was queen of Jpop in late 90s to early 2000s) , Amie Namuro, Exile, Da Pump even K-pop star BoA (Avex Trax is SM Entertainment partner in Japan) in mid 90s to early 2000s. Most of its consumers were millenials who were still pre-teens and teens in that years, so cheap music purchasing via Kiosk is very logic marketing movement.

  • @bluescrubby
    @bluescrubby 2 года назад +25

    I moved to Japan in 1998, got one of these, and absolutely loved being able to share music without the increase in tape hiss. I do recall that asking to share an album was more of an ask than if it were cassette, because you were asking to get exactly what your friend may have paid for, rather than a slightly degraded copy.

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem 2 года назад

      Yeah, Japan only needed them

  • @magneto7930
    @magneto7930 Год назад +6

    I have 2 MiniDisc recorders. I use them to mix my own music, but I had one in the 90s as well. CD recorders came into the picture, but they were expensive. You had a lot of great editing capability on the MiniDisc recorders that CD recorders were not offering yet. Fun toys. Excellent upload!

  • @GearSeekers
    @GearSeekers 3 года назад +703

    Still rocking MD as my main portable music format.

    • @shanapagdilao3580
      @shanapagdilao3580 3 года назад +50

      are u serious? damn

    • @christianwhite4486
      @christianwhite4486 3 года назад +27

      @@shanapagdilao3580 There's nothing wrong with that

    • @SatomiForward
      @SatomiForward 3 года назад +14

      As an interchangeable format in 2021 it's bretty good. Good on ya bud

    • @MarcosRobertoDosSantosJF
      @MarcosRobertoDosSantosJF 3 года назад +29

      I still use a sony minidisc as a portable recorder (to record musical ideias and riffs). And I also still use an ipod classic as my main portable music player.

    • @TheWolfiet
      @TheWolfiet 3 года назад +17

      @@MarcosRobertoDosSantosJF aw man, one of those older ipods with rockbox and an SSD modded in is just unbeatable.

  • @theserulesoflife
    @theserulesoflife 3 года назад +34

    This was wonderful! I still have my minidisc player and about 40 minidiscs laying around. I’m happy to be apart of history. You did a great job!

  • @Toschez
    @Toschez 3 года назад +34

    Grown up in Japan (starting from casette), I was fortunate to enjoy the full life cycle of Mini Discs. I especially love the size of the disc, it feels so great.

    • @chuheihkg
      @chuheihkg 3 года назад +4

      I personally am, due to some reasons, I use the minidisc player for moderate mastering due to a more stable nature.

    • @David.L291
      @David.L291 3 года назад

      and it actually also reminds me a bit of like a floppy disk for the pc ha, it was a great format, it still a great shame it didn't take off more and be more of a success, I think if this had of come about in the mid to late 80's I think it would've take more of a strong hold because at the time the CD would've been relatively new and the MD would've been a good competitive media but I really thought it was a great product

    • @southerncharity7928
      @southerncharity7928 3 года назад

      CD was always better. And still king today

    • @Joshua_N-A
      @Joshua_N-A 3 года назад +3

      @@southerncharity7928 I just hate those scratches on them.

  • @julian-xd6iz
    @julian-xd6iz Год назад +16

    Minidisc was my fave for recording from vinyl in the day and still is to me a portable game changer NEVER failed. the industry hated the fact you could record digitally from vinyl...I felt like James Bond was given a devise from Q.

  • @ajsrf
    @ajsrf 3 года назад +59

    I watched a 40 minute documentary on a topic i never really cared about and liked it. Interesting

    • @kinggenderman1874
      @kinggenderman1874 3 года назад

      Because it's a good documentary, just not in the content it's of (for you)

    • @sheberly
      @sheberly 3 года назад +2

      36 minutes ago I was laughing at you 🤣

  • @CanyonWanderer
    @CanyonWanderer 2 года назад +49

    I just remembered: one of my band mates at that time actually had a device that allowed you to record 4 single audio tracks on MD in parallel, making it a portable 4 track mini studio!

    • @slimsantilli4476
      @slimsantilli4476 2 года назад +6

      I had a yamaha 8 track home studio that used MD. Good times.

    • @mancuniancandidatem
      @mancuniancandidatem 2 года назад +5

      I used to use my mini disc to bounce down tracks from my yamaha cassette 4 track. There was little loss of quality and it actually added a desirable compression to the sound. It required careful mixing from the cassette 4 track but you could keep bouncing to mini disc and then back to two tracks RL on the 4 track leaving two more tracks for overdubs. Keep repeating the process and you had cheap Beatles style recording.

    • @CanyonWanderer
      @CanyonWanderer 2 года назад +1

      @@slimsantilli4476 That is even better!, I remember us having to mix Drums and Bass to have 3 tracks left for 2 guitars and vocals

    • @CanyonWanderer
      @CanyonWanderer 2 года назад +2

      @@mancuniancandidatem cool and very inventive!

  • @Phydoux2112
    @Phydoux2112 2 года назад +52

    I still have the Sony MZ-707 Disc recorder. I used it to record my band rehearsals so I could go and practice later on my own to the tracks we were writing. It's still a great little unit!

  • @Calicarver
    @Calicarver Год назад +5

    I got into Minidisc early, in 1994 or so, and I picked up the smallest portable Walkman unit I could find in addition to a stationary unit MDS 320 at home. The neat thing with the MDS 320 remote control was its keyboard. It had all the letters of the alphabet so adding titles became a breeze. My main motivation to ditch compact cassettes, which I had a large collection of was audio quality and skippable tracks. This was a HUGE improvement over cassettes!
    Downloading music from Napster and Limewire etc had its own drawbacks: slow download speeds over home modems, risk of downloading something else (viruses), and the music files' audio quality was sometimes poor. Most likely, the music industry tried to poison the well by uploading garbage content.
    Looking back, the effort needed to just listening to your own playlists (mix-discs) were far more involved than todays streaming options where you simply search the artists or songs you like and drag them into a list and you're done

  • @jqulrich
    @jqulrich 2 года назад +36

    I still have my mini disk receiver/recorder, 8 mini disks, and the original mini disk player. Also still rerecording on the disks to this day. Such an awesome piece of hardware that was really ahead of it's time.

    • @lucasrem
      @lucasrem 2 года назад

      a future that never came, lol

    • @keithianlocke
      @keithianlocke 2 года назад

      Me too. Still got the original Sony MDR-G52 headphones that I purchased with it.
      Still sounds great.

  • @BentleyPascoe
    @BentleyPascoe 3 года назад +35

    Long ago when I worked in radio, MD was the format of choice, especially for on-location recording (interviews, etc) due to the combination of portability and incredible audio fidelity. I love MDs, editing audio from them was a breeze and the resulting audio was always top notch.

    • @FrederickThomasjr
      @FrederickThomasjr 2 года назад

      Use to use them for voice over work and on-hold music for client phone systems, but radio and broadcast was where they shined (and some are probably still chugging away).

  • @matthewotremba9230
    @matthewotremba9230 3 года назад +74

    The A/B erase function in mini disc format was PRICELESS
    I spent loads of time editing live band rehearsals easily
    Even turning long jams into comprehensive songs

    • @mattheweggleton493
      @mattheweggleton493 3 года назад +14

      Live entertainment was the place that this format really shown. I worked for multiple modern dance and theatre companies in the late 90s and early 2000's when CDR was unpredictable and cassette to inflexible and imprecise. MD was the only format that made my job remotely feasible.

    • @matthewotremba9230
      @matthewotremba9230 3 года назад +6

      I have to get a Full size Md Deck

    • @matthewotremba9230
      @matthewotremba9230 3 года назад +5

      @@mattheweggleton493
      I have 50 unused , and a bunch burned that i have to go thru from a band i had left in 2003
      Then a band i was with around 2013
      The earlier band , we used 4 mics on the rehearsal room , into a mixer , then thru an EQ and a BBE sonic maxamizer
      It really worked well
      The latter was a portable with the Sony
      Stereo mic
      Not tooooo shabby at all
      Cheers

    • @chay3003
      @chay3003 2 года назад +2

      @@matthewotremba9230 I still have my MD deck and Net MD Walkman

    • @matthewotremba9230
      @matthewotremba9230 2 года назад +2

      @@chay3003 i have 2 mini recorders
      And one mini player
      Went thru 3 or 4 decks
      They were problematic

  • @paul8926
    @paul8926 11 месяцев назад +2

    I had both the Sony MiniDisc component deck and portable player…loved every minute of it ! I never cared for cassette recorders, because the tape always got caught in the cartridge. I didn’t think the DCC recorder would catch on.

  • @patrickriley195
    @patrickriley195 2 года назад +20

    I still use MiniDisc at home and in my car. Works great for recording my band’s rehearsals as well as my guitar/bass/drum practice sessions.

  • @doc_sav
    @doc_sav 3 года назад +39

    I am always sad that MD just had such unfortunate timing in the US and baseless resistance from the recording industry. There was a lot to like about it, and the fact that some MD portable recorders never really dropped in price even before collecting them became a thing really shows that. I also still think it is one of the coolest looking formats.

    • @darrenc2721
      @darrenc2721 3 года назад +6

      It really was and still is an awesome piece of kit to own, most if not all of my mds still play just fine, despite having been recorded many times. I now collect MD's I find so many in thrift stores, just literally boxes of discs tossed in the bargain bin. We had both DCC and MD, but the sheer portability of MD won us over. If you were an early adopter then you have something special to hang on to. CD recordables became cheap and mp3 basically wiped out the market very quickly in terms of storage and portability. I still use and record MD's and I find the format still excites me to this day. Good memories.

    • @doc_sav
      @doc_sav 3 года назад +2

      @@darrenc2721 I haven't seen any in a thrift store for years, but most of my local thrift stores probably throw them out with the cassettes now, which is sad.

    • @darrenc2721
      @darrenc2721 3 года назад +4

      @@doc_sav my local thrift store had like 75 random md's in a box. I found a mix of madonna and tower records mds and even batman the movie on md! I paid $30 for the box as they didnt know what to do with them. I picked up an md player with an original sony microphone for like $5, they didnt know if it even worked. He had no idea what it was. Just stuck it in the window. I grabbed it. I am always keeping an eye out for them. ebay now sells random lots, but again its a punt for what you get.

    • @fuzzybobbles
      @fuzzybobbles 3 года назад +9

      Music Industry: We're worried about people copying our overpriced crap for free.
      Internet: Hold my beer, I need to kick some greedy companies asses.

    • @kevinrice6245
      @kevinrice6245 3 года назад +1

      @@darrenc2721 lucky! I never see MD media or hardware at any of my local thrift stores. I’m always on the lookout but haven’t yet come across any. Maybe other people keep beating me to the punch lol.

  • @davenik1999
    @davenik1999 2 года назад +58

    Wow, this is a really well-researched, well-produced piece! I learned waaaaay more than I expected to. Definitely going to see what else this channel has to offer.

    • @TheNeilo-Audiosound
      @TheNeilo-Audiosound 2 года назад

      I totally agree and I Subscribed Straight away because of the Research and info👍

  • @bobgreene2892
    @bobgreene2892 11 месяцев назад

    Very smoothly-edited and exquisitely detailed documentary. For us, it covered a period in our lives we had experienced as average consumers, not technophiles, so it provided a wide tapestry for understanding.
    Your lighting, graphics and close-up was superb.

  • @alienteknology5390
    @alienteknology5390 3 года назад +69

    I always thought mini disc was the superior format & grew increasingly more disappointed as it's sales declined. It's chief competitor was the so called Compact Disc. But in truth mini disc was actually more... compact. It was also more robust & capable of rewriting. DCC was absurd in my opinion, no matter what the marketing experts of the time proposed. It was still tape & subject to it's fragility & limitations. As far as mini disc's compression issue was concerned, ATRAC could have been improved upon over the years. And in hindsight it was still better than the AAC codec adopted by iTunes, RUclips & many more of today's largest distributors of digital audio.

    • @georgeASD
      @georgeASD 2 года назад +3

      l happen to have one mini disk player given to me by an aunt who no longer used it, and right out of the gate l noticed that the sound quality of the MD is waaay better than standard digital formats, l think they still have value today. they are still superior to other options.

    • @highks496
      @highks496 2 года назад +7

      @@georgeASD I don't know what digital formats you are listening to today, but the late 90ies ATRAC which compressed 700 MB of raw PCM data into 140 MB certainly is not superior to anything we have today. Not even 128 bit AAC.

    • @JoelSmithR1
      @JoelSmithR1 2 года назад +5

      @@highks496 nostalgia warps reality for people.

    • @animowany111
      @animowany111 2 года назад

      Also the fact that RUclips now mostly uses Opus for audio, not AAC. That's mostly a fallback for devices that don't support Opus.

    • @the.communist
      @the.communist 2 года назад

      Current digital music is terrible. No soul.

  • @vaxes
    @vaxes 3 года назад +10

    I am from the UK and when I was at High School around 2000 everyone in my year got minidisk players.
    The optical output on the PS2 was a big driving factor.
    Even now when we reminisce about our school days my friends and I always talk fondly of the minidisk.

  • @gelinrefira
    @gelinrefira 3 года назад +403

    "American record labels hated the arrangement." That's when you know you did the right thing.

    • @larrytownley2231
      @larrytownley2231 3 года назад +18

      Cause it never wore out !!!0

    • @JenXOfficialEDM
      @JenXOfficialEDM 2 года назад +8

      1990: We are afraid of piracy
      2000: hold my beer

    • @theinktician
      @theinktician 2 года назад +2

      @@JenXOfficialEDM RIP Dreamcast

    • @kornkernel2232
      @kornkernel2232 2 года назад +6

      And funny thing, it actually flourished well in Japan. Their music industry didn't died out for the fear of piracy, and Sony already knew about it thus implemented a limit as well. They developed a nice balance ecosystem around that benefits consumers, artist, labels and rental shops.
      That it didn't benefit are the greedy ones.

    • @JenXOfficialEDM
      @JenXOfficialEDM 2 года назад +4

      @@kornkernel2232 I second this. A lot of people were already buying used CDs from ebay. Labels got their big bucks from new CD sales. I'll never forget that one country star who wanted people to be banned from buying his CDs used back in the early 90s.

  • @MrAce269
    @MrAce269 2 месяца назад +2

    I love this format. I still own 2 stationary Minidisc Player/Recorders and 3 portable Minidisc Player/Recorders. Still use them to this day.

  • @The_sinner_Jim_Whitney
    @The_sinner_Jim_Whitney 2 года назад +27

    I’ve always wished that MiniDisc had caught on more. I had a MiniDisc deck and MiniDisc Walkman back in like 2000, I was pretty thoroughly impressed with both, and the discs themselves. I wouldn’t listen to them at home on good speakers, but for headphones while working, riding bikes, hiking, whatever, they were great. And the delay record ‘time machine’ thing was GREAT for a ‘90s kid who recorded mixtapes from radio, vinyl, and CD all the time.

  • @Balrog132
    @Balrog132 2 года назад +54

    MiniDisc was such a cool format and I am sad that it didn't really take off in a general way like Cassettes or CDs. It was a bit like magic at the time.

    • @morho9422
      @morho9422 2 года назад

      pissed me off too. now i see having md in 90's as a bridge between tapes and computer.
      then i saw it as the replacement for the tapes and started to build a music library. now my minidiscs sit next to my tapes in my drawer with relics.

    • @Balrog132
      @Balrog132 2 года назад

      @@morho9422 next to the CDs? 🤣

    • @hardtymz2517
      @hardtymz2517 Год назад +2

      @@Balrog132 at least CDs are good sound quality. minidiscs were a weird lossy format. it literally was the OG mp3. ew

  • @LoganTanner
    @LoganTanner 3 года назад +11

    This was amazing. Awesome production value and incredibly in-depth storytelling and history. Thank you. Took me back to my youth where I used to flip through Crutchfield catalogs dreaming of being able to afford a MiniDisc player.

  • @JAMESJJEFFERS
    @JAMESJJEFFERS Год назад +8

    I STILL have My Mini and Absolutely LOVE IT. 1 AAA battery and you can listen to Impeccable Quality Music in a Combination of Your choice and can even mix music intro and outro one song into next. No Skipping at Any Time No matter the impact. No scratches and easy recording. Almost 60 songs at that time was Amazing. Glad I grabbed one. Sad they didn't catch on. Definitely was before it's time. Also have cassettes and 45"/33" records.

    • @Futuresolidsnake
      @Futuresolidsnake 10 месяцев назад

      Me too! I still have it along with the little case that holds 5 MD’s in a multi-color pack. I thought it was going to be the future format for sure. Ahh, those were exciting days. 😃👍🏻👍🏻

  • @agepbiz
    @agepbiz 3 года назад +165

    I miss my MZ-R50, I never understood why MD did not get popular enough to become mainstream where I lived. But thank you for the trip down memory lane :)

    • @Stewbular
      @Stewbular 3 года назад +27

      Sony screwed us & themselves w the ATRAC DRM on MD’s
      Reporters & live music recordists had a difficult time getting the recording off the MDs

    • @arnox4554
      @arnox4554 3 года назад +1

      If the MDs are anything like CD-RW/DVD-RWs and their infamously bad reliability (even a totally clean unscratched disc had a chance to fail on each editing), then it doesn't surprise me that they didn't take off as much as they could have.

    • @Stewbular
      @Stewbular 3 года назад +14

      @@arnox4554
      All my MD’s from the early ‘90’s are still working perfectly

    • @700gsteak
      @700gsteak 3 года назад +10

      @@arnox4554 so in other words you have no experience with mds

    • @arnox4554
      @arnox4554 3 года назад +2

      @@700gsteak No, and that's why I said IF.

  • @hansmuller1625
    @hansmuller1625 3 года назад +44

    I'd argue that minidisc was no failure, it just had a rather short period when it was the right thing.

    • @davefish2280
      @davefish2280 3 года назад +3

      It failed spectacularly in the west. Sony spent hundreds of millions of dollars marketing Minidisc in the US and Europe, and sold virtually no units there. They never recouped even half what they spent on launching it.

    • @heathwirt8919
      @heathwirt8919 3 года назад +3

      Solid state memory storage was advancing rapidly during that time frame which ultimately became the future and current format. It was the best format available for digital record and playback at the time.

    • @tookitogo
      @tookitogo 2 года назад

      Short? They were on the market for almost 30 years!!

  • @Lif7ed
    @Lif7ed Год назад +25

    That metallic blue mini disc player looked so beautiful and still does, can't believe I've seen it again right now after all these years. My old man owned one of these and it was such an awesome little gadget

    • @immortalz3r08
      @immortalz3r08 9 месяцев назад

      I own the same one, though it has been through the ringer as its prime use was when I was a teen. But man that image reminded me of the day of unboxing it.

    • @sambasteve
      @sambasteve 5 месяцев назад +1

      I was highly invested in the MiniDisc format. And I had two of those metallic blue player/recorders. Loved 'em. and still have 3 other portable players and two home recorders. They all still work!

  • @nauxjuan
    @nauxjuan Месяц назад +1

    Sony mini disc players absolutely amazing and are still my all time favorite portable music device. The small zipper books for your disks compared to 15 lbs CD books was clutch

  • @silverandblack6141
    @silverandblack6141 3 года назад +27

    It makes me really happy that you're finally talking in depth about a format that you obviously have a LOT of passion for, this was a great video!

  • @hyzenthlay7151
    @hyzenthlay7151 3 года назад +10

    I love how you did this video. You can tell you have a soft spot for the format, but you give the facts very well as they are without catering to fanboyism... A great balance that works fantastic, a deep dive into the history of the format, and as for the footage, well, so much eye candy for us all, and not just the Minidisc units.
    Congratulations on a great video, Colin.

  • @Cinemaaereo
    @Cinemaaereo 3 года назад +18

    How many good memories of my dear MD. Listening to songs with girls (two headphone outputs) and many concerts recorded by the mic input.

  • @ronspi
    @ronspi Год назад +5

    I loved my MD player/Rec unit. I still remember the stick remote control I clipped to the fanny pack as I controlled the device while working out. I still have Pink Floyd's Pulse pre-recorded MiniDisc, but I no longer have the player. Ah, those were good times. Thank you for this tremendous lesson on the strange history of the format wars. Well done!

    • @Futuresolidsnake
      @Futuresolidsnake 10 месяцев назад +1

      I still have mine and I have a cool car version of the remote on the mini jack that plugs into a car stereo input. I loved my Net-MD so much. It still works and it is sitting on a shelf in my living room with all my memorabilia I treasure. It was such a cool way to carry a huge library of music in your pocket. And I loved how I could record on the fly with it. I was the only person I knew who invested in one.

  • @PiddeBas
    @PiddeBas 3 года назад +147

    "Retro-futurism" quite exactly describe minidisc as of now

    • @pieceofschmidtgamer
      @pieceofschmidtgamer 3 года назад +15

      I bet it's confusing Sony to no end...
      Sony: But I thought you didn't want it anymore!
      Hipsters: But it's not "in" anymore, so that means it's in!
      Sony: *confused screaming*

    • @cyberlord64
      @cyberlord64 3 года назад

      @@pieceofschmidtgamer This

  • @LeonardoDaVinci01
    @LeonardoDaVinci01 2 года назад +58

    This channel is as timeless as the Minidisc.. beautiful narration and excellent enjoyablity/information ratio! Keep it up, bro

  • @DjP2379
    @DjP2379 2 года назад +18

    I still own all my minidisc recorder’s, players, a boombox and a car stereo. Also have tons of blanks, cases and storage shelfs. Loved the minidisc format! Great video too.

    • @alfieakaronaldog
      @alfieakaronaldog Год назад

      Hi, which boombox was it?
      I only remember a very cool looking Sony that I kicked myself for not buying (not as much as going for a JVC PC 55 over a JVC RC M90 though 😭).

  • @kaasmeester5903
    @kaasmeester5903 2 месяца назад +1

    Still got a portable Minidisc player I bought in Japan 25 years ago. For its day an amazing piece of tech: not much bigger than the disc itself, ability to record, optical in/out, and a (removable!) Li Ion battery that could be charged in place. Couple of hours on a single disc in long play mode. I got it out the other day, the battery is still fine and all of the discs I recorded still play just fine. Can't beat solid state players, but this really was the culmination of portable removable media before those came along.

  • @davidsmith7943
    @davidsmith7943 3 года назад +31

    Watching this gave me so much nostalgia of my years with MiniDisc!

  • @interlace84
    @interlace84 3 года назад +46

    I'm 36 now, still remembering recording vinyls to tapes as a kid and having a walkman, discman and a minidisc-player at some point.. today, having spotify or youtube at your fingertips really changed the whole listening experience, and I don't believe it's all for the best.
    (inb4 the "ok boomer" replies btw =d I swear having to record a handful of tracks you picked out really had something flashing through recommended algorithmic playlists just doesn't )

    • @Teguh_Seventy
      @Teguh_Seventy 3 года назад +8

      ''ok boomer''

    • @interlace84
      @interlace84 3 года назад +3

      @@Teguh_Seventy 🤣🤣

    • @indream6318
      @indream6318 3 года назад +7

      I agree! The ceremony to insert vinyl or anything is kind of preparing you for the music and setting up the intention to listen for this music, making it more immersive in some ways

    • @doc_sav
      @doc_sav 3 года назад +11

      Hey, I'm your age, and we definitely aren't boomers my friend. First gen millennials. And I agree - streaming music is convenient, but it doesn't have the same soul that a stack of tapes / discs did. Plus you don't actually own anything, which still makes me uncomfortable.

    • @rnelson1415
      @rnelson1415 3 года назад +1

      Boomer is just a state of mind. I'm a little younger than you and feel like a boomer almost every day lol

  • @Godonstilts
    @Godonstilts 2 года назад +13

    I freaking loved my MD player. Absolutely amazing piece of kit, whilst expensive, was worth every penny. That thing kept me company and entertained for a loooong time!

  • @Omi_Kasigi
    @Omi_Kasigi Год назад +2

    I never got to experience the MiniDisc. I had several walkmans as a kid. Electronic stores here in our country hardly sold the minidisc. I went directly to a Discman when I managed to save my allowance to buy one eventually.

  • @manveruppd
    @manveruppd 3 года назад +25

    An elegant format for a more civilised time! :P Thanks for the nostalgia trip, and for reminding me I've got a bunch of bootleg concert recordings on MD that I still haven't copied over to the computer! I really hope my player still works!

  • @1204Simca
    @1204Simca 3 года назад +52

    I so thought MD was the way, easier to put in the center console & less hassle dealing with than CDs in a car. :(

    • @rollingtroll
      @rollingtroll 3 года назад +3

      Yup, these days it's surpassed by solid state storage but back in the day it was so much better than CD in a car. I completely skipped CD for car use, going straight from cassette to MD.

    • @rossr6616
      @rossr6616 3 года назад +3

      and better protected

    • @rollingtroll
      @rollingtroll 3 года назад

      @@rossr6616 Absolutely! With tapes I just accepted that the cold and heat and moisture of a car would ruin them, so I'd use cheaper tapes and always made car copies. With CD's I could do the same but swapping tapes and dropping a CD onto a dirty car carpet once would probably mean the end of that CD. Bit impractical. These days I just stream. 2021 represent. My cars are still old though ;).

    • @talisikid1618
      @talisikid1618 3 года назад +1

      Me too.

  • @RetroFighter0
    @RetroFighter0 3 года назад +49

    Imagine a crossover episode with Techmoan, LGR, 8bit Guy, Modern Classic, This Does Not Compute, Mr Carlson Lab, VWestlife and Technology Connections

    • @devikwolf
      @devikwolf 3 года назад +15

      TC will find a way to bring the topic back to latent heat

    • @kovaskovas
      @kovaskovas 3 года назад +1

      Thank you for some new names.

    • @dracoony
      @dracoony 3 года назад +4

      The Tech-vengers?

    • @NikiDorian
      @NikiDorian 3 года назад +1

      Don't forget Marche Minidisc! It's a new channel but very promising.

    • @RetroFighter0
      @RetroFighter0 3 года назад

      @@gluttonousmaximus9048 you're right. I would also include tech tangents.

  • @matthewfensterwald1853
    @matthewfensterwald1853 Месяц назад

    This video popped on my feed, and my bit to add was when I was in 7th grade a boy came to class with a CD he had made at home, his dad worked for Philips, and he got his hands on a pre-production unit to burn a CD. It wasn't much for the songs he put on it, but the fact I got to take home a mixtape on a CD he made, showed me the future that was coming. I was there to see it all, from the first MP3 players the size of a brick to the MD player my friend had in 2000. Perfect telling of the history of a format. Thank you!

  • @ptzzz
    @ptzzz 3 года назад +25

    MiniDiscs probably never even became a thing where I live even when they were new, considering I've never see anyone talking about it online or hear from relatives who were into music and CDs in the 2000s. My first time hearing of it was in an anime & manga series called ReLIFE, then I saw Techmoan's vid on the MiniDisc and found them really cool

    • @nineeskay9469
      @nineeskay9469 3 года назад +3

      Love ReLife but I'm old enough to remember the early days of the iPod vs minidisc wars. Penny Arcade, an early webcomic had a joke where the iPod doesn't skip, but if you wrap a minidisc player with 300 one dollar bills that you saved by buying it instead, it wouldn't skip either.

    • @darrenc2721
      @darrenc2721 3 года назад

      I must have been the only person where i lived to own one, I actually wore my first md recorder out, it was so popular for parties. I literally exhausted the laser. I still have the warranty repair from sony for it.

    • @Stewbular
      @Stewbular 3 года назад +1

      There are MDs in the 1st matrix movie

  • @Ozpeter
    @Ozpeter 3 года назад +11

    What an excellent presentation! At one time I used MD as a backup medium when recording classical CDs. Occasionally some MD recorded sections found their way into commercial CDs and nobody complained... I still have all sorts of MD devices in the cupboard. I no longer use them but can't quite toss them out...

  • @sayparler
    @sayparler 3 года назад +10

    Amazing video, so insightful, and so acurate!
    MDs have a special place in my heart, as user of both portable and home deck devices. They were so feature rich, and sound quality was good enough.
    I also appreciate you haven't just used random stock footage, and actually have these devices in hand, to give us a much better look on them!
    Thank you so much for producing, and sharing it!

  • @johnvandijk928
    @johnvandijk928 Год назад +1

    Thank you for your contribution by summarizing the life time of this fanantastic media carrier.! Was enjoying your overview and views about the format over time.
    Ive adopted the MD sinds 1992, bought the second recorder developed by Sony the R2, and since then recorded many many discs. To be used portable, at home and in car. Several devices are trashed due to plastics and mechanics getting old, but I still having at least 10 working decks including the MDS-JA333ES and the MDS-JA30ES, MDX-D3 and many other portable devices at home, and appr. 1000 MDs, Im still a fan for and the format but also about Sony to keep the format alive as long as possible. Note in all these years, I've only had one defective disc. The format is reliable beyond limits.