During my Thanksgiving trip two store closings caught my eye.
The Tower Records just near Lincoln Center in New York has a going
out of business sale. I used to kill time there before going to a
concert or an opera. In fact all the Tower Records are closing down.
The small Millburn Camera Shop in New Jersey is no longer.
Both of these stores just couldn't keep up with the world of the
Internet. Tower Records made their mark by having an amazing
collection, one of the best collection of classical in the country in
their Lincoln Center store. But their collection cannot compete with
online stores like Amazon, Walmart beats them in price on the popular
CDs, not to mention the convenience of music downloads, both legal and
illegal.
The Millburn Camera Shop supported the amateur photographer with
products, advice and specialized film developing and printing
services. In high school I set up a darkroom in my basement with
equipment from the store and bought my Black and White film in
bulk from them. But as today's amateurs now have mostly gone digital,
software replaces most of the equipment and developing. Bulk film
comes in the form of a tiny media card. And so the friendly
neighborhood camera shop disappears.
It has become much easier to access music and to take and process
pictures than it ever has in the past. But I will miss the days of
browsing music and developing pictures.
An administrative note: Because of a recent large increase in comment
spam I now use CAPTCHA-type tests to leave comments. Sorry for the
inconvenience.
1) ALSO may-be-extinct soon- Campus Bookstores. The Univ of MD bookstore only orders HALF the books needed for a class since they assume (correctly) that students will buy online- used or even new. The notion of buying in bulk and thus saving money, and then selling, does not seem to work now. Not quite sure why that is- shipping is still a cost.
2) Art-house Movie houses MAY be on the decline (I have no idea if they really are) since people can get `obscure movies' or foriegn films on DVD's EASILY. Same with Porn.
3) The whole notion of an `obscure' movie or a `hard to find' book are also going away to some extend. there was a Vidoe on YOU-TUBE called CONSPIRACY THEORY ROCK (a schoolhouse rock satire about conspriacies, it aired only ONCE on SNL and was then yanked). It was billed as `rare footage' ITS ON YOU-TUBE! How rare can it be? bill g.