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hi rick, technically any recording medium that uses compression is not high-fidelity, (hi-fi) so it depends not so much on the quality of the recording medium as the expected quality of the playback medium. that is, what is the intended use of these recordings? mini-disc and mp3 are lossy compression schemes, so they degrade the audio signal no matter what the marketing hype says, but they can both produce good quality recordings depending on you intentions. Using headphones, I find mp3s trying to listen to at anything less than 256kb/s, as I can hear the swishy flange like compression artefacts in things like cymbals , and minidisc similarly seems to mutilate the upper frequencies a bit too much for my ears (or whatever upper range hearing that hasn't been blasted away by overdriven guitar amps and pub gigs). as a result I try to record to a raw, uncompressed format like .WAV or .aiff wherever possible. But that is only if I'm recording for listening pleasure. If the recording is just for personal reference and quick and dirty sketches, so to speak, then it's not so much an issue. another option is to go with a portable dat deck, as these are apparently getting blown out dirt cheap on ebay at the moment, and possibly in stores as well (haven't looked). the dat mechanisms are no longer being manufactured, so it is possible to find portable units around the us$150 mark, or so I have heard on the internet grapevine. this is a lossless format that will produce superior quality to minidisc and mp3 - only thing being that if your tape mechanism dies, you'll find it increasingly harder to get it repaired I assume. I'm also assuming the dat tapes are going to go up in price as the format becomes superseded. (which again could also mean now is a good time to stock up at blowout prices...) -michael > > I am wondering: with all you experts on this list: > > > WHAT IS THE BEST LIVE RECORDING MEDIUM THAT IS INEXPENSIVE (please > don't say a laptop). > I mean, is there any elegant solution under $200? > > as a subcategory for this thread, I'd also be curious what the > distinction is in fidelity between Mini Disc and > say, mp3s or other media. > > > thanks, Rick >