Cassette
tape
sales
are
at
a
20-year
high,
the
vinyl
market
is
on
a
17-year
growth
streak,
and
CDs
have
caught
the
attention
of
Gen
Z.
After
a
resurgence
of
retro
physical
media,
tech
companies
have
now
jumped
in
to
provide
new
hardware
to
play
these
formats.
Companies
like
We
Are
Rewind,
Fiio,
and
others
offer
updated
designs
for
new
cassette
and
CD
players,
with
some
additional
functionality
like
USB-C
charging
and
Bluetooth.
But
after
a
quick
glance
at
these
updated
music
gadgets
in
person,
we
found
that
they
are
seemingly
not
as
advanced
as
some
of
their
vintage
counterparts.
The
dimensions
of
We
Are
Rewind’s
Bluetooth
cassette
player
are
roughly
the
same
as
Sony’s
first-ever
Walkman
from
1979
—
but
by
the
time
the
cassette
Walkman
ended
its
initial
run
in
the
early
2000s,
cassette
players
were
practically
the
size
of
cassettes
themselves.
Fiio’s
DM-13
Bluetooth
CD
player
has
a
large
square
design
that
resembles
a
Sony
Discman
from
the
late
1980s,
even
though,
by
2001,
we
had
super
slim
round
CD
players
from
iRiver,
Panasonic,
and
Sony
with
enough
anti-skip
protection
to
make
it
through
an
entire
album.
Look
at
these
new
players
compared
to
its
vintage
counterparts
So,
what
happened
to
the
compact
designs
we
took
for
granted
in
the
early
2000s?
For
The
Verge’s
YouTube
channel,
I
talked
to
the
companies
making
these
modernized
players
—
We
Are
Rewind
and
Fiio
—
to
figure
out
why
we
can’t
make
cassette
and
CD
players
like
we
used
to.
Keep
watching
for
a
hands-on
review
of
these
gadgets
compared
to
cassette
and
CD
players
at
the
height
of
the
technology.
(Originally posted by Andrew Marino)
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