When I have seen people listing their systems lately


I have noticed a lot of people using conventional CD players and SACD players. I remember being at an Audiophile club meeting a couple of years ago and the owner of the store claiming conventional CD players were dead and obsolete.


Are conventional players gaining in popularity nowadays or are they just stalling till digital becomes more standardized.


taters
I started with .wav several years back.   I liked .wav because it was native CD format.   Tagging and artwork was basic and limited but sufficient with Logitech Squeeze system.   

 I investigated making the change about a year or so back  as part of testing out Plex as a replacement for Logitech Squeeze system.     Newer software like Plex tends to have more features that can make use of more extended and flexible tagging. 

That trend continues to evolve.  .wav is basic and limited with tags. 

So i experimented with FLAC at first versus wav to see if I heard any difference.   I did not so I proceeded to batch convert all my files to flac and start using Plex.  I still use Squeeze with Flac as well but that system is legacy and no new versions or features coming out.  So I will leave it behind eventually.

 I use Plex and Squeeze both currently with flac.   No difference in sound quality  that I can detect and Plex + flac works well, even with the free version of Plex.    I deleted my archived .wav files after a while once I felt sure I would have no need to go back.

I have pretty good ears and a resolving system I think and can detect most any change I make like with wires, power, etc.   But I detect no difference really between FLAC and .wav.   Nor should there be if things done right technically.   FLAC is compressed but lossless and system must convert to PCM  (.wav format essentially) to play, so as long as all is working well nothing to fear based on my experience.

My advice is take it one step at a time and see what works for you.   There could be differences case by case for many reasons.  No two people or systems work the same, so you gotta do what works best for you.
 
I ran into the same situation as mapman.  I had all my CD's ripped as wav.  Due to the non-existent tagging options in WAV, I was forced to manually add each CD into the windows media player database.  Basically rip a CD, load windows media player, add the new CD folder to the library, and use the lookup to "tag" the folder as an album.  

This worked fine once my collection was ripped.  But, what I was doing is storing the data in a database that only Windows Media Player could use instead of storing the data in the music files.

One day my boot/OS drive died on me which was no big deal since my music files were on another drive.  I got a replacement drive, and re-loaded windows.  I then launched Windows Media Player and added my music folder to the library.  Instead having a thousand nice and neat albums, I had a single album with 15K songs.  When my boot drive died, I also lost the Windows Media Player database.   All the work was lost.



Yes, in the end it is best to have all "static" tags and album art embedded in the file and use a open and non-proprietary file format like FLAC rather than any vendor proprietary one. That keeps you from being setback should you choose to use something new or different to play.

It also makes life easy to restore your library from a similar backup in case the drive dies or other disaster strikes. I’ve been through that too. So many more things can go wrong or change if music and all related info is not all stored in the same file. Its best to store teh most important info that will not change much if over over time in the file ("static" tags like title, artist, album art, etc.) and then let the various software used to play pull in other supplemental information that may change over time via live web connection dynamically, things like linking to external resources like allmusic for artist bios or album reviews, lyrics, wikipedia articles or any related content that evolves grows, changes and gets better hopefully over time.

Companies like Apple Microsoft and the others all do whatever they can get away with to try to lock customers into their systems and believe me Apple in particular can get away with a lot these days. Used to be more Microsoft.
I think stand alone CD Players are mostly dead, but I don't think the Redbook CD format is dead.  I differentiate CD players from universal disc players that player SACD, CD, DVD, and Blu Ray.

My old standby player was a Rotel RCD-950.  Having an IT background, I always have more computers laying around than I need.  Back in 2009 I decided to rip a bunch of music using EAC into wav, and compare the sound quality to my CD Player.  My PC was connected to my Rotel RSX-1056 receiver with an optical digital cable, and my CD was connected with the usual analog RCA cables.

Had the same song playing on both systems and synced up.  I could barely tell any difference between the two when switching between sources.  I then brought my wife in and had her listen as I switched back in forth.  On a few different songs she thought the PC source sounded better.  At that point I ripped all my Cd's to files and have never looked back.

To this day I still buy some CD's. They are simply used to rip into FLAC, and then are put in storage out of sight.  Personally, I can never see going back to having racks of CD's in the living room, plucking a CD from the shelf, putting the disc in the player, and pressing play.  I play vinyl when I want that level of interaction.  I have purchased a few high def music files if I'm sure they were not upsampled from redbook, but I still buy lots of CD's.