laptop cd burner

Nomad_Soul/Shutterstock (Licensed)

Teen asks the internet how to burn CDs—and millennials are feeling old AF

Millennials are not OK.

 

Nahila Bonfiglio

Internet Culture

Posted on Oct 24, 2018   Updated on May 21, 2021, 3:22 am CDT

A 17-year-old from Baltimore just caused millennials on Twitter to plunge into a very early midlife crisis.

Alyssa Lucas posted an innocuous question on Oct. 20, and within hours her notifications were flooded. The question was simple, and completely understandable if you remember being taught yourself. “Maybe it’s just the generation z in me but how did people burn CDs? Like how did you just get a blank CD and put songs on it?” Lucas asked the Twitter masses, expecting perhaps a dozen responses.

Instead, hundreds of millennials saw her post and had the same realization in tandem: We’re old.

https://twitter.com/tamaranians/status/1053838589652623361

It is probably safe to say that no one over the age of 25 made it through childhood without burning at least one CD. Most of us were likely taught how to burn CDs by an older sibling, or perhaps a more tech-savvy friend. The process was pretty simple, as people on Twitter were quick to point out.

“We’d buy like 100 blank CDs at a time,” one user responded. “You take one out, insert it into a disc drive, put together a playlist in iTunes (there were always like 3 songs you’d put on every playlist because you were obsessed with them), select ‘burn CD’ from a drop down, and then wait 20 minutes.”

As for the actual science behind burning disks, it is a touch more complicated. According to TechTerms, the word “burn” is used literally, as “the CD-writer, or burner, literally burns the data onto a writable CD.”

The data is burned onto the disk using a laser, which can be used to “engrave thousands of 1’s and 0’s onto a CD,” which combine to make the tracks on those classic mixtapes we all recall so fondly.

Though there were certainly some helpful tweets thrown in, most of the responses Lucas got came from baffled millennials trying to wrap their heads around feeling old, in many cases for the first time. Lucas told the Daily Dot via email that the question first occurred to her in a Best Buy, where she overheard a conversation about the changing times. Her mother used to burn mixtapes, she said, but had never passed the knowledge on to her.

millennials burn CD
Alyssa Lucas

For the most part, people were friendly—if not a bit taken aback—in their responses, she said.

“Some people got much more in depth and then some seemed genuinely upset and thought I was an idiot or ‘too young for Twitter,'” Lucas said. “I definitely feel like a lot of people adequately answered my question. I feel like I’ve gotten all the ins and outs I could need to burn a cd.”

https://twitter.com/WalkNightDeer/status/1054428402558689280

https://twitter.com/MrCarefulGamer/status/1054400548219338752

https://twitter.com/incogNietBRO/status/1054881170041692160

https://twitter.com/introvertsdan/status/1053394387634475008

Lucas even provided a “safe space” for other young folks to come out and admit that they too had never burned a CD. They can probably manage modern technology much better than anyone who remembers how many batteries a boombox needs, however, so they are doing just fine.

As is always the case with the internet, not everyone was pleasant. Though dozens reached out to offer what little they knew about the process of burning a disk, others felt the need to go after Lucas for daring to pose the question at all.

Though she admitted she will probably never burn a CD, as most computers don’t even come with disk drives anymore, Lucas said she was glad to better understand the process. She said streaming seems to her to be the most unique form of technology that we have right now, but even that is likely to change soon. She believes that self-serving technology is on the rise.

“I feel like the advancements in technology make it seem like time is going much faster,” she said. “Like for my age range, rental services like Blockbuster and Redbox were very popular and after what some might seem a really short period of time, Blockbuster has completely shut down and Redbox has become quite obsolete.”

Lucas pointed out that technology only a few years old can seem much older because of its constant state of evolution.

“I don’t think that we should be upset or afraid of how quickly technology changes or how the things we used to do are becoming obsolete, because with good intentions technology could make things easier for so many people,” Lucas said.

Millennials might have to spend a few days feeling ancient because of her tweet, but it is about time we started resenting the younger generation for, well, being younger. Once, we were the kids with the new tech and the fresh knowledge, but as Lucas’ tweet showed, that time has passed.

H/T BuzzFeed

Share this article
*First Published: Oct 24, 2018, 9:27 am CDT