You need a special device. There are some record players that also have an area for blank compact discs. Follow the instructions given that came with the device. You could also just buy the alum directly on CD, or grab a record player from a yard sale and hear the vinyl record the way that it was intended.
cds are better cds are better
You can send the records to a special vinyl to digital internet shop, they will burn your records on a cd. You can also buy a digital vinyl player and connect it to a computer with a cd burner and burn it to a cd
Yes. CDs became available in 1983. Despite the cost of CDs (about double the price of vinyl) and players (the first ones were $1000 or more), CD sales surpassed vinyl in 1986.
vinyl
The best USB turntables for converting your old vinyl records to CDs is USB 2.0. USB 2.0 is the fastest devise and you can read more at www.getusb.info
Almost all styles were on vinyl previous to cds.
They haven't. Cds just became more popular. But the year was 1982 and the vinyl record use were dwindyling in numbers
8-Track Tapes and Cassette Tapes were in between Vinyl and CDs. So there was no real transition from Vinyl to CD. Vinyls have never stopped being produced.
no
Some artists release their tracks and albums on CDs and vinyl for collecting purposes. So you can't buy all new music on vinyl.
If you are talking about vinyl as in someone saying "I love that song, I have it on vinyl", then it is a record pressed on a vinyl material. It is also called an album or an LP (long playing). Vinyl records stopped being produced after the invention of 8-track tapes, cassette tapes, CDs and DVDs. They can still be played today on a record player or turntable attached to the stereo system.
You can buy dubbing cassette decks and they'll work well for converting CDs to cassettes.