Go for the head. It's the only way.
Nah, if this thing is going to live again, I'll chime in.
I doubt that I read the article, as it came out before I joined, so let's see if I'm anywhere near topic...
To me, vinyl, tapes, 8-tracks, and low-cost sound systems
were the good old days. Why? Because that's what we had...and I loved it. I didn't know any better, so it was all great to me. I remember putting scratchy records on the portable turntable/speaker system that my parents had - everything from Christmas music to Star Wars to the thin-vinyl humpback whale record that came in the National Geographic magazine issue. I absolutely loved that whale record (and, I believe, still have it). I can still remember hurdling over my brother's bed to crank up "Urgent" by Foreigner on his clock radio...a clock radio that used flip down numbers because digital was still so new to consumer gear. I wouldn't be able to tell if the music was compressed or not on that thing.
I'd record albums to tapes because they were more portable and easier to use. Then CDs came out. Ooooh. The crispness. That's what I remember: crispness. I had no complaints about it at all, but I was still mostly a radio listener back then. CDs were also more convenient, which is a huge deal to me.
So, convenience. Nowadays, after the explosion of the internet for mainstream uses, access to music is astonishing. There's more out there right at our fingertips than I will ever know exists. I can go to YouTube and listen to songs from my youth, or songs from right now. On my computer speakers, they sound better than the systems that I grew up with, so I'm happy as a clam.
After all, music is about enjoyment. If someone enjoys what they're listening to, be it compressed or whatever, that's all that matters in my book.