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Hi, uh, Robert. I just had to look into the information about the optical drives being discontinued, and I haven't been able to track down any reliable source on that. It looks like the, uh, all of the articles about it all reference back to something that appears to have been barfed out by an AI chatbot, so I wouldn't put too much faith in that being correct until some of the big manufacturers actually come out and say it. The drives are still readily available right now. And as far as ripping Blu-rays, 4K especially, that is, however, very difficult. All of the drives that you'll find on the market today are locked down in firmware to prevent you from doing that. There are a number of them that are capable, but they have to be flashed with custom firmware, and you can research that. The best place would be on the MakeMKV forums. That's the program that rips them and adds, you have to get a specific drive, and I believe the newer ones will prevent you from modifying the firmware, so you have to get an older one. 4K is not really worth the effort to rip it, and ripping it is illegal anyway, so if you're already breaking the law doing that, you might as well just pirate the movie instead. And, uh, let's see, as far as distributing music for an independent artist, probably the best way to go about that would be a website that provides digital downloads, something like Bandcamp, where you can sell your album on downloads, provide lossless codecs, so it sounds just as good as a CD, or even better if you want to provide higher sample rates. And even if you want physical media, there are bunches of companies now that will even press vinyl in small quantities at reasonable prices. If you want to sell something physical and provide a digital download code to go along with that, because a lot of the people buying it don't even have a way of playing it. But, yeah, that's all I got for now. 73, everyone. H3-7LR, back to Nat. This is repeater station Kilo Kilo 7, November Quebec November, All Star Node 6222. Yeah, that is very true, Cody. I expect that numerous people, again, I don't have a DVD player, I don't have a Blu-ray player, I think one of the few Blu-ray players I did own was my TS-3 when I purchased it, and I purchased it because it was Blu-ray compatible and it was designed to play Blu-ray. And that was where I went the Sony route instead of the Xbox route because I wanted to play Blu-ray. And at that time there was more Blu-rays available than there was HD DVDs. And again, it brings back to my point again where Sony nailed it. They hit the market, they hit it running, and they totally blew Microsoft out of the water with the HD DVD platform. I mean, very few people even know what an HD DVD is, let alone that there was a special player that was required for it. And commercially, nobody made an HD DVD player, if I remember correctly. I think there may have been one manufacturer who did it just to make sure that they were compatible with every platform and every source of media that was out there. But Sony did an incredible job with the Blu-rays. And I kind of laugh because we were at a thrift shop the other day, and amongst the records, which I've had this new found fascination of records, including the fact that I picked up my AC DC Back in Black album I'm super excited about, as well as the Eagles Hotel California album with the backstage Eagles Hotel California pass, which was just mind-blowing to get those in my possession, are laser discs. As a kid I loved the laser disc platform, and I'm still trying to find a laser disc, but amongst the records there were probably 15 different laser discs that were just mixed in with them all. Whoever was running the shop had no idea the difference between a laser disc and a record. It was a habitat for humanity, yes. And I'm sure they had no idea, didn't care, and I probably could have got every single one of those laser discs for the exact same price as the album, the record for like $1 or $1.50 each. I mean, you look at what they originally cost, and that's just insulting to the original producers and some of that. But it's a platform that didn't last very long, the laser disc, it was condensed down into the DVD. And it's a fraction of the size and a fraction of the space to keep your collection. And if I remember correctly as well, a little bit more resilient to scratches. The laser disc, I want to say, nothing worse than getting halfway through your movie and it skipping. And I mean, the DVDs did the same thing, and the Blu-rays, I think it got pretty good about it. They didn't really do that as much, but the buffering was there for it. But anyway, I'm going down again. I'm a rabbit hole, I don't need to go down. This is KJ7JX. Robert, it is 1006 p.m. on Sunday, so I'm going to hand it over to my other half here. KJ7RAB, over to you.
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