Sure, storage has gotten cheaper, but.....
"That said, if someone has an abundance of disk space and a modest collection that they don't feel is going to outgrow its home, there is no reason to compress for compressions sake."
Terabyte SATA drives, the last I knew, were available from Tiger Direct for about $300.00. That's over 1,000 CD's without compression, and plenty of room to spare. My present collection of just over 400 CD's is about 255 gigabytes.
d.b.
Dan,
Sure, if you want to spend $300.00 and have space in your PC for another drive. But if you want to/have to leverage what you already have then my point is that a lossless CODEC can be your friend. Why spend $300, if you can fit what you need on the hardware you already have--for free. Not to mention the fact that the server will use less power, generate less noise, and generate less heat.
Also, there are users out there who's libraries number in the thousands of CDs and tens of thousands of tracks. Again, lossless compression can be their friend with very little downside.
That said, library management--ripping, encoding, tagging--is a topic unto itself. You can see some interesting conversations and opinions on those topics here:
http://forums.slimdevices.com/forumdisplay.php?f=8
I'm not saying that FLAC, or any compression for that matter, always has a benefit. That was the point of my previous comment. For some people ripping to raw PCM/.WAV is just fine. If it suits your needs, awesome. But lossless compression, whether FLAC or some of the other options out there, is a useful alternative for many people that does solve/mitigate real world issues.
Regards,
Mike