• Estradiol Enjoyer @lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 days ago

    CD players were first sold in 1982, when Boomers (if the baby boom started 1945) were hitting their 40s and established in every industry. I think they were actually the perfect demographic to be able to afford a CD player when it first came out.

      • EmpatheticTeddyBear@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        As someone who worked sales in that time period, yes, it was the younger crowd (Gen X) that adapted much better to burning CDs. A lot of the baby boomers had difficulty with understanding certain key concepts and details. … And instructions to be honest…

        As for the “Boomer” commenter above: the military and government in the USA still burns to CD for a variety of reasons (no, I won’t go into them). So if someone is military, a government employee, or even just a contractor, there is a chance that at some point they will need to burn a CD, regardless of age.

        • P00ptart@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Really? Cause in my time in the army I never once saw any kind of military information being saved to cd. Not once. Never. Even in the early 2000s that was just never a thing. Ever.

          • EmpatheticTeddyBear@lemmy.world
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            10 hours ago

            Sounds like you might not have been part of a team that needed to do so. In the environments I had been part of, they had requirements for it.

            • P00ptart@lemmy.world
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              6 hours ago

              We always used a black box thing, can’t remember what it was called, to load cypher to anything that was military equipment like radios and nav systems, and thumb drives for anything else.

          • FoxyFerengi@lemm.ee
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            2 days ago

            I requested my medical records from my time in the military in 2014 and received them on CD. Which was funny because I didn’t have a computer that could read them at the time, and I still haven’t read them. Turns out the information i needed was already available to the people giving my c&p exam

      • Valmond@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        It’s a gen-x thing, you know, the forgotten generation.

        Lived through the “DOUBLE SPEED!!!” reader up to the 52 some read-write-rewrite.

      • lunarul@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        I’m in my 40s now and I definitely did not burn near as many CDs as my dad did (he was born in '49)