RiverCrochet 12 hours ago

> The only real case for what is soon to be lost, I think, is that of a limited selection of music in the car forcing you to spend time with it, forging deep and often weird attachments

Honestly that's the whole article, lol.

My thoughts: Nowadays we may have deep and weird attachments with algorithms.

I don't know if this is a bad or honestly even a new thing. The music industry and its attempt to market music could be considered a type of algorithm, or even multiple algorithms. Defining and marketing genres of music "algorithmizes" the product I think - if genre X sells, then more musicians will try to call their music genre X and maybe even modify their product.

And people who grew up in the physical medium heydays of the 60s through the mid 90s are definitely attached to their preferences.

  • cole-k 7 hours ago

    I can totally relate to the "deep and often weird attachments" you forge listening to albums, although I'm not sure I agree that there's a case to be made for it. A few weeks ago, I heard a song in a random gelato shop in Italy that instantly sent me back 15 years. To my knowledge, its band only had one hit (at least if we go by airplay), and this was decidedly not it. Yet I knew it well because I tend to listen to whole albums and this song was on the album with their one hit. After the high of hearing an obscure alt rock song in the strangest of places passed, it dawned on me that I didn't like that song now. Nor had I fifteen years ago.

    I still listen to albums in their entirety, but I have to wonder how much exactly we lose by having the choice to only take what we like from them (without buying them in their entirety). In defense of the author, I will say that listening to the same song you don't like much enough times can make you at least tolerate it. Perhaps having all of the music of the world at my fingertips has just made me pickier, not necessarily happier.

    The song in question, by the way, was "Time Won't Let Me Go" by The Bravery.

  • internet101010 10 hours ago

    This is why a not small group of people hate U2. Some album of theirs was on Apple devices by default and would be the first thing that played when you turned on the car for some reason.

    • bee_rider 8 hours ago

      That could be why some people hate U2. But, they already had a devoted cadre of haters. They were too successful for too long for there not to be.

      War is a good album, though, IIRC.

    • shwaj 9 hours ago

      Bar Bar Barbara Santa Barbara…

  • HKH2 11 hours ago

    Well, familiarity breeds contempt, so to have exotic things, you need to dance the line between what is plain and what is too strange to make sense of. An algorithm should do that for you.

    An algorithm with your playlist history along with others' should provide decent recommendations. Spotify used to let you dislike things and it worked really well, but then they stopped doing that and my recommendations became generic garbage.

    • chucksmash 10 hours ago

      Agreed on Spotify recommendations. I felt like the playlists I got from Spotify circa 2017 did a really good job of walking that line. Nowadays the "song radio" and "artist radio" playlists are bad. Definitely a step back. There are bands I still like that I've added to "Never play music from this artist" because Spotify puts them on every single playlist for me now.

  • bigstrat2003 11 hours ago

    > Honestly that's the whole article, lol.

    To be fair the story about taunting her brother with Champagne Supernova when he needed to pee was pretty funny. But yeah, there's not a lot of meat there.

  • Log_out_ 6 hours ago

    I would love a algo that recommends music the artists loved and listens too. Musicians musicians are were its at.

mauvehaus 32 minutes ago

If your car uses a DIN mount for the radio, it's generally easy to find a compatible aftermarket head unit. You'll likely have to get a wiring harness adapter, and doing a tidy job mating the two halves of that requires a bit of extremely basic soldering and the foresight to purchase some shrink tubing.

The only downside to going this route is that most aftermarket head units look like they were designed by 17 year old young men to impress their peers.

AIUI, If you don't have a DIN mount, it's usually possible to purchase an adapter to get the physical interface sorted. Aesthetically, it may be a crapshoot. The only cars I've done this on (because of a failing cd player) have had a DIN mount.

hateful 10 hours ago

My phone NEVER connects properly and if I want to use it for streaming, I have to spend 2-3 minutes connecting it every time. This has always been the case. Past 3 cards, past 6 phones.

Now-a-days I load up a small flash drive for the car with a small sampling of what I want to listen to. I have another one at home and "Swap" them from time to time with new things. That way it's not overloaded, doesn't take 2 minutes to load up. So it's very much like a mix CD or the mp3 CDs I would burn a couple of decades ago.

  • ranger207 8 hours ago

    I have an aftermarket head unit for my pre-infotainment car that's worked perfectly for Bluetooth since the day I got it. Given my experiences elsewhere, I'm convinced the problem with car Bluetooth isn't the Bluetooth, it's the car manufacturer's code

  • __MatrixMan__ 9 hours ago

    Mine connects 100% of the time. Pause works 99% of the time. The other 1% of the time it invokes "redial last number".

  • prpl 9 hours ago

    I have a two VWs, ‘17 and ‘19. Both connect flawlessly with bluetooth and wired carplay (no wireless carplay on these though)

    Phone sound is also much better than cheap headphones or speaker. No latency issues (unless it’s Google Meet)

  • philistine 10 hours ago

    Wired CarPlay is rock solid. Bluetooth has never, and never, will be as foolproof as a wire, or as Wi-Fi for that matter.

    • drivers99 9 hours ago

      > Wired CarPlay is rock solid

      Mine always has a sound blip a few (15? 30? I haven't timed it) seconds in whenever I play any song (or at least, the first song when I start playing music). I wish I had a CD player in the car.

    • girvo 9 hours ago

      Unless you're in a 2017 VW Polo, then even wired CarPlay can be weirdly flaky. Though that appears to be the ICE system itself losing the plot rather than the connection per se, but I can't be certain. It was quite surprising to come across!

    • saturn8601 9 hours ago

      This is not true in my case. This year I have been renting various cars to see which is best to replace my current car. Using wired carplay there are random car specific bugs (Google Maps losing tracking and freezing up, spotify crashing requiring to stop and restart the car, etc.) I have tried Ford, Chevy, Mazda, and Hyundai,(Tesla as well but that is not Carplay).

    • ClassyJacket 9 hours ago

      My car bluetooth (2022 Tesla Model 3) is great and reliable, EXCEPT the huge latency. It connects and disconnects when it should, and is fine for audio, but if I want to sit in my car and watch a video (when public charging, when eating, or on my break at work, so a common situation), it literally has about one second of latency making everything completely unwatchable.

  • AlbertCory 10 hours ago

    I have a microSD card in the phone, and it's great. When it works.

    When it doesn't, the CD always works. Always. But one does get sick of that CD.

    Bluetooth sucks.

    • doubled112 9 hours ago

      > the CD always works

      Unless it doesn't.

      In the 2011 Ford Focus my wife and I had, the stereo would lock up, stop responding to input, and play the same 1/4 second on repeat until you cut power.

    • thaumasiotes 7 hours ago

      I used to have a car with a tape player in it. No CD player.

      But I got a kit that was meant to give that the ability to play CDs, which consisted of a CD player and an adapter where one end plugged into an audio output jack and the other end was an imitation cassette that went into the tape drive.

      It was great. I used a tiny screenless mp3 player and plugged the tape adapter into it. Worked beautifully except for the fact that I couldn't charge the mp3 player in the car. But I could easily organize whatever music I wanted for the car on that mp3 player, and since it was screenless it could be operated by feel.

      A friend of mine was proud, once, that his new car included an audio input jack in the dashboard. That's gone out of fashion now, but frankly it's still the ideal setup.

motohagiography 10 hours ago

the lore still has it that any tape left in a glove compartment long enough eventually decomposes into Queen's Greatest Hits.

CD's are different. I've only ever had one CD in the car player for over a decade, and recently switched it out a few years ago for another one. the first was gould's goldberg variations, but what replaced it was alan mearns' bach album Sei Solo Works, which are the most interesting arrangements I've heard.

I'm probably a bit odd where I think most music is just opportunity cost against time spent listening to bach, but toward weird car music, there is something separate about it, even in the bachmobile.

  • bee_rider 8 hours ago

    Decomposes? That’s a weird way of writing “achieves perfection.”

  • mp05 10 hours ago

    > eventually decomposes into Queen's Greatest Hits.

    Can confirm.

    • xarope 9 hours ago

      you both have access to my car's CD player contents? Gosh...

grujicd 6 hours ago

IMO, CD with mp3 is the sweetspot for car use. Regular CD is too short and it's awkward and/or dangerous to choose and change the next disc while driving. Some flash based storage with ton of music on the other hand gives too much choice and it's hard to pick next album while driving. Spotify can be ok but if algorithm takes you to a strange place it's also not easy to switch something else with hands on the wheel. And there's a question of cell coverage, or roaming costs if you drive across countries. I know you can download on Spotify, I'm using it as an example of "play anything" streaming vs preloaded collection.

CD with mp3 gives something like 10 hours of music which is perfect for longer trips. You spend one time to make few compilations, you pick a disc depending on a mood and you're covered for the whole trip, you don't think about poor reception.

Sure, you can also make playlists with Spotify/flash, but you're not "forced" by medium so we mostly don't do it. And if there's a passenger willing to be a dj then it's a different thing.

pram 6 hours ago

I had Radiohead's OK Computer in my cars CD player for like 10 years, it would start before the MP3 player adapter would load. So I've heard the opening to Airbag like hundreds+ of times probably lol

  • ellisd 6 hours ago

    OK Computer feels like pure bliss compared to my nightmare of iOS autoplaying the only album on my phone: U2's Songs of Innocence. I've never intentionally listened to it, nor do I plan start!

    >Despite the poor press surrounding the release, an independent study of select iOS users by Kantar Group found that in January 2015, 23 percent of music listeners played at least one song by U2, more than any other artist for that month. The study also found that of those participants who listened to U2's music, 95 percent of them accessed at least one track from Songs of Innocence.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Songs_of_Innocence_(U2_album)#...

Triphibian 10 hours ago

Spotty coverage on the mountain drive to my house so I use CDs. I've started burning copies of CDs because the washboard bumps on the dirt roads scratch the discs up pretty quick. Sirius XM works great too.

  • Triphibian 10 hours ago

    Also: CD prices at thrift stores top out at 3 bucks. The local library thrift sells them for a quarter each!

  • jillesvangurp 7 hours ago

    The last few times I rented cars, I used Spotify offline via bluetooth. Worked great.

    • dzhiurgis 37 minutes ago

      Offline is becoming so increasingly rare that it’s weird some companies considering it a premium feature.

inasio 8 hours ago

My car doesn't have a CD player any more, but I still have a Minidisc player in the glove compartment with a maybe 20 discs that provide a guaranteed nostalgia trip (each disc has 20-50 songs with a very specific set of eigenvalues from back in the day). Also helps that the Minidisc player runs off a single AA, Sony built good stuff, I found it in storage after easily 10-15 years of its last use and it still played music off that one AA

garciansmith 11 hours ago

I mostly used MiniDiscs in the late '90s and early 2000s (it was tape adapters and then aux cables for me), and I kind of always hated CDs since they could so easily be scratched, especially in a car.

But I do really miss long road trips for which my friends would burn specific mixes on CD. There was something nice about hearing their carefully selected tracks meant to embody the mood of the journey.

  • kevin_thibedeau 10 hours ago

    You can burn a USB stick with selected tracks meant to embody the mood of the journey.

    • garciansmith 6 hours ago

      Sure, anyone can still make a playlist. But in my experience most people just use streaming apps and therefore a lot less time is spent on curation. And there is a little something different in the act when you need to take the time to put it on a CD or tape.

snickerbockers 9 hours ago

Lack of CD player in newer cars is the main thing holding me back from replacing my '14 prius.

I feel safe with my CD collection. Services may rise and fall but I will always have a binder full of old CDs, and contrary to popular belief discrot isn't a significant problem as long as they're kept in a dark place. I'm actually young enough to have grown up with MP3 players, but it used to be that the only way (other than piracy) to have a DRM-free copy of your music was to rip it from CD. If you bought it from one of the big online music stores, your $0.99 purchase would forever be locked in to their MP3 player's proprietary DRM scheme.

I also used to use Amazon's MP3 cloud service, wherein you would upload your own music into "the cloud" and it would forever be in your amazon account. Then one day I realized that "forever" only lasts for a few years because they had sent me one e-mail that got caught in my spam filter warning me of "the cloud"'s imminent demise and that I need to download all my MP3's within a month before they're gone forever. Luckily they aren't actually gone forever, because most of them were on my old iPod or were ripped from CDs that I still have but it still soured my opinions against relying on anything I can't control.

Anyways, I still don't trust spotify or other streaming services because I know from experience that silicon valley's definition of "forever" is a lot shorter than the operational lifespan of my CDs.

  • Kirby64 9 hours ago

    Why not rip them to a flash drive or your phone and play them however you want? Every infotainment unit has Bluetooth, and some support playing audio via USB.

  • thaumasiotes 7 hours ago

    > I also used to use Amazon's MP3 cloud service, wherein you would upload your own music into "the cloud" and it would forever be in your amazon account. Then one day I realized that "forever" only lasts for a few years because they had sent me one e-mail that got caught in my spam filter warning me of "the cloud"'s imminent demise and that I need to download all my MP3's within a month before they're gone forever. Luckily they aren't actually gone forever, because most of them were on my old iPod or were ripped from CDs that I still have but it still soured my opinions against relying on anything I can't control.

    Funny story. I got that email too.

    But when I visit my Amazon music library, all of those old uploads are still there. They were never deleted.

    Odds are the music you uploaded to Amazon is still there too.

novoreorx 9 hours ago

Imagine a "phone player" where you insert your phone into a slot, just like you would with a CD in a CD player. It then plays local music as well as streaming services from the phone.

  • cyberpunk 9 hours ago

    … so CarPlay?

    • novoreorx 5 hours ago

      Yeah but it not only works for iPhone

globalise83 9 hours ago

Honestly I had to check that this article wasn't from 2014. Most UK and European car manufacturers haven't had CD players for at least a decade, maybe 15 years. The only reason Subaru had them is because CDs are still a thing in Japan. https://www.economist.com/asia/2024/04/25/why-do-the-japanes...

  • HnUser12 9 hours ago

    My 2022 crosstrek has CD player. I didn’t notice its existence for a long time.

aceazzameen 7 hours ago

My car still has a CD player. Unfortunately I have a phone holder attached to the disc slot so I never use it anymore.

causality0 2 hours ago

I'm going to miss CD players in cars mainly for the fact that they are a convenient place to securely mount smartphone holders that's in a prominent position without blocking anything important.

thx 11 hours ago

i <33 mi CDs , especially in z car

at_a_remove 6 hours ago

I am preparing to get into the digital thing, but I just ... love a car CD player. Used to have a multi-disc that seated twelve in a cartridge, so I would have a dozen-disc mix for one kind of mood, another if a particular friend was in the car, and so on.

I would have transitioned early, but I found most headunits to be queerly useless when it comes to playlists. They just don't seem to do them, and I've regressed down to a playlist with a single track with a one-word title. (I did manage to get playlists working on a Roku, at least.) Playlists are a natural descendant of the album order, so you would think it would be a priority.

I know that .m3u and .m3u8 are in that realm where many dialects exist to support, but I just think that headunits could catch up in this area.

Simulacra 10 hours ago

I bought my first iPod in 2003 and I have not used a car CD player since, or the car radio for that matter.

shwaj 12 hours ago

“… when I sit in the driver’s seat – categorically the best place to listen to music alone“

:eye-roll: I suppose, if you don’t mind road noise. Can’t stand this overwrought writing style.

  • idiotsecant 10 hours ago

    There is something special for me about listening to a certain song late at night speeding on a damp muggy highway when the world is empty but somehow menacing, with nothing in the whole universe other than me and the crickets and the electric promise of a coming dawn full of opportunity.

    For some subset of the last generation of american youth (and maybe this one? I am too hopelessly old to know now) the personal automobile had a kind of almost shamanic importance and the CD collection was a not insignificant part of that.

    The 'best' music is not the music that is most accurately rendered. It is music in the time and place where it most properly induces the distilled current of its meaning into your soul in a way that you feel its echos 30 years later.

    For some people, that is in fact in a car.

    • PopAlongKid 6 hours ago

      >There is something special for me about listening to a certain song late at night speeding on a damp muggy highway when the world is empty but somehow menacing, with nothing in the whole universe other than me and the crickets and the electric promise of a coming dawn full of opportunity.

      You are paraphrasing the lyrics to Golden Earring "Radar Love".

        I've been drivin' all night, my hands wet on the wheel
        ...
        The radio's playing some forgotten song
        Brenda Lee's "Coming On Strong"
        The road has got me hypnotized
        And I'm a-speedin' into a new sunrise
      • idiotsecant 43 minutes ago

        Ironically, there is a nonzero chance I would have had this album in the zip-up polyester companion to this threads namesake!

    • shwaj 9 hours ago

      I don’t have a problem with any of that. I don’t fetishize cars quite like you describe, but I do enjoy being on a 3 hour drive because I know nothing is going to interrupt me, and usually I’m listening to music while I do.

      My issue is the debasement of the language by a professional writer. This use of “categorically” is akin to “I was, like, literally starving”, and for whatever reason this grates on me. I stopped reading immediately.

      • PhasmaFelis 9 hours ago

        I don't think hyperbole automatically counts as debasement of the language.

        • HKH2 7 hours ago

          It's like the loudness war but in language.

  • PhasmaFelis 9 hours ago

    If the road noise is overpowering your music, you've got it too low.

    • HKH2 7 hours ago

      Some music works better with road noise. If you listen to electronic music, road noise doesn't matter much, but I guess it would matter a lot if you were listening to something orchestral because you can easily hear things out of place.

    • happymellon 6 hours ago

      Or you need to get the bearings replaced.

  • codefeenix 11 hours ago

    maybe not categorically, but potentially the best place for that person.