Here we are, audioholics, having a nice exchange of ideas about whether or not CD's are becoming obsolete. Is anyone else feeling the irony of our entire hobby, serious audio, having already become obsolete?
Our entire hobby, such as it is, is slipping away in to obscurity, not just CD's.
I love listening to music and fooling around with the equipment and technology that makes it work. I have a very large family. Even though I share as much as humanly possible, I'm still the only one that takes audio seriously. My family all have music systems, but, none of them are "on purpose" selections of serious gear.
I would wager that there isn't another member of my family, or someone in my neighborhood, that buys and rips CDs. Everyone streams or just plays whats handy on whats handy. Bluetooth speakers abound.
Audio as a hobby? I doubt it. Home theater in a box? All up and down the street.
@MrBoat gave me a line on some new-to-me music this week. 50 year old titles. I will go and chase those down on CD. It might take me two or three weeks to lay my hands on some of those that weren't all that popular to begin with. But, I'll make the effort because I love the music. The physical media, the CD, is still king in my book for the way to acquire it. Legally. Buy the CD, used or new, and I'm legally good to go from a usage point of view. Screw the lawyers. Screw the RIAA and the music police.
I am a cranky old man and its far too late to change that.