Cool, it's a woody!My dad had the Station wagon version- the huskie-
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You can register using your Google, Facebook, or Twitter account, just click here.Cool, it's a woody!My dad had the Station wagon version- the huskie-
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A young person I spoke to, told me that young people do not buy hard copies of music like CDs, but instead downloaded all their music from the internet.Most people my age don't even watch broadcast TV, myself included.
It wasn't an instant success as too Datsun, and over the years -my have they grown! Todays Civic is larger than the older Accords. No longer are they "small cars". Follow the Cooper to see how large there becoming (especially compared to the original )
Watch the Fiat continue to "grow", think they have a 4 Dr and an SUV??.
With that in mind then, the Elio will be a V6 with a much larger size overall down the road
Twin Turbos? Now that is an outstanding idea!& Twin Turbos! )
I don't know, I still buy the whole album on CD and listen to it straigjt through.A young person I spoke to, told me that young people do not buy hard copies of music like CDs, but instead downloaded all their music from the internet.
When playing vinyl and CDs, I located which recording I wanted to play, by looking at the picture on the covers. It was fast.
How do young people find their music? Do they remember every title and look through a long list of titles to find their music? Or is there a picture downloaded so they can scan the picture to find their music, much like I have scanned album/CD covers to find my music?
I'm old and currently buy my music one favorite song at a time. The album covers are displayed in my i-tunes Library where I've copied my entire CD collection. The ultimate way to manage a music collection.........which I hope to be listening to in my Elio sooner or later.A young person I spoke to, told me that young people do not buy hard copies of music like CDs, but instead downloaded all their music from the internet.
When playing vinyl and CDs, I located which recording I wanted to play, by looking at the picture on the covers. It was fast.
How do young people find their music? Do they remember every title and look through a long list of titles to find their music? Or is there a picture downloaded so they can scan the picture to find their music, much like I have scanned album/CD covers to find my music?
Depends on the program. Many programs will download the album covers from the Internet. Also, graphic files (JPG or PNG) can be embedded in MP3 files. (And other sound formats, such as FLAC or WMA.) When I look at my collection through my audio player, foobar2000, I get a list of all the artists, with a picture of that artist/group. Double-click to open that, and I get a spread of album covers from that artist, sorted by date. Open that to get the track list. Or if I know the title of the song, a simple search gets me a list of all the songs matching that criteria. It's pretty flexible and powerful.How do young people find their music? Do they remember every title and look through a long list of titles to find their music? Or is there a picture downloaded so they can scan the picture to find their music, much like I have scanned album/CD covers to find my music?
I don't know, I still buy the whole album on CD and listen to it straigjt through.
The great majority of for-pay music services (like iTunes) organize their music by artist, then by album title. The young'uns remember the artist (which is how most of us do it), then they can scan album titles and song titles to find what they're looking for. In addition, each track can be tagged, so they can find a particular track which includes a specific guest artist (Evanescence / Fallen / "Bring Me to Life" GUEST ARTIST: Paul McCoy) or songs written by particular people (i.e., all the songs written by Amy Lee, including those written for other artists.) (I had no idea that Jackson Browne was the co-writer of the Eagle's first hit "Take It Easy" if it weren't for the tagging.) Now, if like me, you rip CDs or other sources to get individual tracks, you're on your own.How do young people find their music? Do they remember every title and look through a long list of titles to find their music? Or is there a picture downloaded so they can scan the picture to find their music, much like I have scanned album/CD covers to find my music?
The great majority of for-pay music services (like iTunes) organize their music by artist, then by album title. The young'uns remember the artist (which is how most of us do it), then they can scan album titles and song titles to find what they're looking for. In addition, each track can be tagged, so they can find a particular track which includes a specific guest artist (Evanescence / Fallen / "Bring Me to Life" GUEST ARTIST: Paul McCoy) or songs written by particular people (i.e., all the songs written by Amy Lee, including those written for other artists.) (I had no idea that Jackson Browne was the co-writer of the Eagle's first hit "Take It Easy" if it weren't for the tagging.) Now, if like me, you rip CDs or other sources to get individual tracks, you're on your own.
Bonus round: raise your hand if you didn't go "Who?" when I mentioned Jackson Browne.