I'm not combative. I just don't recommend getting into vinyl at this point in time. Some of us were really happy to be able to get away from it. I have a fairly large record collection and all of it has been digitized. I have three turntables in the storage closet. And apparently you have a problem with my recommending against vinyl in the beginners forum. Don't let it bother you. I've heard it before.
Apologies if you interpret my comment as my having "... a problem with [your] recommending against vinyl in the beginners' [sic] forum ...". Not only do I not have a problem with that position, but I would not recommend vinyl to anyone who wasn't first considering it and asking for advice on how to make it so. You need to care about Sound Quality (SQ) issues far more than the average person interested in audio reproduction to go beyond the most basic steps with regard to vinyl in our modern audio reality.
By the way, I must admit as well to being impressed with anyone with a "fairly large record collection" who has managed to digitize it all.
I have done some A-V transcriptions but only for music I decided I needed to hear on portable devices ... autosound mostly, but the usual iPod / iPhone / Music Server applications as well. Beginning about 15 years ago (RME Soundcard, good 'table, cartridge and Phono preamp) I have perhaps 50 or 60 albums at 24/96 that aren't and never will be available in a commercial digital release.
So that particular reason is relevant to me. Somewhat of an aside, but I still miss the G4 IBM chipset used on Apple desktops, whose audio performance to this day outperforms the Intel variants (I never, not once, had a dropout while transcripting analog onto digital Hard Drive, and that includes while using the machine and running other, unrelated applications, and performing 8-channel realtime 24/96 digitizing of live performances, with CPU clockspeeds of 400 and 867MHz. From the moment I switched to Intel for audio, on Windows or MacOS, I discovered I need to listen carefully to every digitized version for errors & dropouts).
Note: I'm OS-agnosgic, been running UNIX MacOS and Windows since 1990, have been a paid contributor to Linux documentation for a major distro, etc. I like to use the best tool for the job, which means moving from one to the other, depending on the task at hand.
MacOS for audio and video though, easily outperforming the other OS/hardware options until perhaps 10 years ago, and no worse than any of the other OS options today.