Oh, I have heard pressings/bad recordings on tables - especially high end rigs... but ok. Cool.I have found that bad digital is much worse than bad analogue. I heard a digital system over the weekend (streamer, DAC, amp, and expensive speakers) that was completely unlistenable. That never happens with any sort of turntable and receiver, never mind a high-analogue rig.
I couldn't stream a song if you paid me to. Not because of my stubbornness towards digital by any means. { child of the 80's }. It's because I haven't taken the time to learn how to. Maybe it sounds a **** ton better. I couldn't tell you. But I live in the country without the hustle and bustle of subways, deadlines or whatever. I have the time to kick back and listen .
Yes, the durability. I have CD's that are from the early days of the format - mid 1980's, and an unacceptable percentage of them skip, some won't play at all and have developed pinholes in the layering that light can get through. I have run across very few unplayable records. Many of my records are over 50 years old and play like new. .

Huh?You buy the file and download it, they could snatch it back at some point in the future. No thanks.
Isn’t ironic that the marketing for cds when they first appeared was “PERFECT SOUND FOREVER”??
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I literally only own 2 CDs.
This is somewhat related to my thought.One thing I noticed, when I listen to vinyl I sit and play the entire side and listen. Fully engaged in the music. Always loved vinyl and never got rid of records or a turntable.
When I starting playing CDs back in 85-86 I would tend to get tired of listening, then jack with the remote, then jump around to other songs ... I was basically less engaged in the music.
But you do have the chance to leave it to your family when you go.
I literally only own 2 CDs.
I own exactly 6
I got back into LPs because at the time, used LPs were cheap. I could walk out of Jerry's Records with an armload of LPs for what one CD cost.
After a while, it occurred to me that I just love playing records. There's no romance to clicking on a link or putting a little silver disc into a machine that sucks it in and you don't see it any more.
I like the look, feel, and smell of the LP. I love to watch the tone arm's stately progress from in-groove to out.
Arguments over which format sounds better are meaningless to me.
I have an old iPod which was a trusty companion that allowed me to my LPs while I worked. I've purchased hi-rez downloads and was mightily impressed by quality but all it did was motivate me to go out and find the LP copy.
I agree with DustyOldPile about CD players, at least. Never had one last more than two or three years before they stopped working.
On the other hand, my main turntable was manufactured 45 years ago, sat in someone's attic for 20 years before it fell into my hands, and after a few hours labor works flawlessly. Try THAT with a disc player!
So I don't download. I don't have a dedicated CD player. I don't stream music. I'm an LP guy and that's that.
I was following until we got to "CD players die every 2 years"...
What? What the heck are you doing to them? I have several, including my dad's original Sony single disc purchased in like, 1991. They all work, zero issues, and some have had hard lives (garage systems, etc). Don't understand!
+1 - but I essentially only listen to vinyl and RtR - in audio it is always a war between what is “better” but for me it’s more like saying cookies are better than cake - you’re gonna have people arguing for each and most of the fans of one side will have only have experience with the garbage store bought version and not the boutique bakery for the other. Vinyl makes me happy when I hear the sound so I guess that’s my flavor and I’m sticking to it!I’ll take good digital over bad analog and good analog over bad digital any day of the week!
Just call me the audio agnostic!