h a l f b a k e r y"Look on my works, ye Mighty, and despair!"
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
A CD player which, when the CD has
finished and until you press Eject,
plays a short looped mp3 of
the sound a record's run-out groove
makes.
Also available: the
mp3 player which plays the noise of
a CD drawer closing/opening at the
beginning/end of every ripped CD.
CD_20player_20that_...a_20record_20player
[Dickcheney6, Dec 06 2008]
DJ CD players
http://www.zzounds....DJ-CD-Players--2456 [Dickcheney6, Feb 28 2009]
[link]
|
|
Can it read the manufacturing date of the CD and make the run-out groove sound scratchier if it's an older disc ? |
|
|
half an hour after the end of one of Robbie Williams' albums finishes, he starts yattering away about his ex-classteacher, spooky stuff! |
|
|
The Sergeant Pepper LP has some weird sound in its run-out groove, which I never got to hear because our phonograph lifted up the needle automatically. |
|
|
(At the beginning of the CD it should play that nice little pop, thump sound of the needle landing on the vinyl.) |
|
|
Thought sure this was another Amishman35 or some such contribution. |
|
|
I confess I totally miss the attraction of these sorts of retro-techno ideas. |
|
|
The Sgt. Pepper CD plays the inner groove track over and over again about 30 times with a slow fade, extremely annoying. At least it was only on the vinyl version once (about 3 seconds long). |
|
|
how about a portable CD player-or a portable MP3 player-
where the music plays slowly when the batteries are about
to go dead? there's a lot of ways you can emulate older
tech these days on newer machines. (those old tape-based
walkmen and boomboxes used to play the music slowly
when the batteries were low which may make for some
interesting conversation :D |
|
|
I've seen "DJ tables" where the turn table is not actually
turning a record-instead it controls the rotational speed of
a
CD player in the machine! I'm not making that up, I swear! |
|
|
I doubt it controls the actual CD player speed, playing speed of the buffered track, I imagine. |
|
| |