moe flam wrote:With FTP you had to work a little for those files, when you were amazed the files sounded like real music, and not like a midi! At least ftp took a small amount of skill (searching nfo files for good sites, for instance), but the p2p genre sure streamlined it. That genre I haven't gotten in to, fairuse I have, because of before stated issues with the recording industry.
Yeah, that was what I came up on as well, and I was a little late to the Napster party at that. Now, I have a small p2p app that I'm happy with (when you download music that is released in limited editions by the artists themselves, the RIAA doesn't much care).
I marvel at the fact that not only did I use FTP for downloading, I did it at work, not only with the full knowledge of my employers, but with a dedicated server for exchange among my peers and I. If you were to even mention the idea of P2P in most workplaces these days, admins would appear at your cube and forcefully insert a dusty spool of Cat-5... sideways.
But I miss those days to be honest. When I downloaded an entire song, I was proud. It wasn't easy and I remember you didn't find what you were looking for, you looked through a friendly FTP folder and were appreciative for what you found.
Yes, ladies and gentlemen, we are so old that MP3 trading now has its own air of nostalgia.