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I listen to a computer playing iTunes most of the day.
Formats change, resolutions change, but the music remains. Sure you may pop a record on the turntable once in a while, but how do you listen to the <I>majority</I> of your music during the year?
Owning your own collection of CDs is for me. After all, many CDs are no longer available, ( Shostakovich Symphonies 6&9 by Bernstein or Tomita's The Planets) and, if you can find them, you will pay a heavy premium on the second hand-market. So I buy CDs or SCADs, and know that I will allways have them. This also includes old LPs that are no longer available. No, I am not old enough to have 78's...
Unfortunately, most of my listening is via a portable CD player. At least I use a headphone amp and Etymotic headphones. The reason? I spend most of my life "on the road," so I listen a lot on airplanes. At home, most of my listening is vinyl, then CDs and SACDs. However, the amount I listen at home is much less than the amount I listen while traveling.
My Olive Symphony with a moded P3a DAC has recently replaced my Denon 2900/P3a combo. As a transport, it is simply wonderful, my DAC is obviously the limiting factor now as I've had a borrowed Turbo Moded Electrocompaniet ECD-1 in the system and OMG! Oh, did you say majority of time? Hmmm, probably XPN FM radio and web radio combined as background music... by a small margin.
Okay, I have spent some time considering this answer and it really does come out LPs, but not by that much. The CD player gets considerable play but not dominantly and most in-car sound is FM, but NPR is mostly not music. Web radio is for my office (WRR and Wolfgang's Vault) but that's not listening. DVD-V is movies at my place. Though I certainly may pop a CD into the Ikemi now and then, most of the music I listen to comes from a big black, or sometimes clear or colored, vinyl disc. And it sounds real good.
I regret to say I listen to CDs now almost exclusively, because I haven't been able to coax great sound from my supposedly great turntable. I'd love an article not on the finer points of overhang and tracking, because I've tried all that, but on specfic supports for different types of turntables. Why wall-mounts are good when bass concentrates there, what specific problems sound like, and practical ways to minimize surface noise on a clean record. Ideas that don't necessarily involve expensive pre-built items would be welcome too.
Though I prefer listening to DVD-Audio and SACD, the fact is that I spend most of my time in my office where I listen to music that I've encoded to a hard drive. Even while home, I'm often running from room to room, cooking, or whatever, so though there's music on, I'm not really listening, so again, the convenience (and wonderful randomness) of playing music from my library via iTunes through my multi-room system is great.
I listen to the radio infrequently, mostly in the car. My collection of softwear started 50 years ago so 85% is on LP. Right now, I am listening to a CD (I own two players and a DVD player, but most of my listening is still from my 25-year-old Linn (a great purchase, which I keep tuned up just like my car).