Ready
Thinks s/he gets paid by the post
I've been collecting music CD's since the 80's. I have around 200 CDs that have been sitting in a closet for close to a decade untouched.
My Tesla does not have a CD player. I don't have a single CD player anywhere in my house. I pay $99/year for Apple Music, which gives me access to virtually every album ever produced, so there is no reason for me to ever want to go back and listen to any of those CDs.
I tried going to the site www.decluttr.com to sell my CDs to them. When I scan them in, about half they have no interest in. The other half have a value of between .17-.22 cents. So if I go to the trouble of scanning them all in and packing them up, I might get $20 for my efforts. It's not worth the trouble to me.
Can anyone provide advice on what to do with these? Would any charity organization want them? Should I just throw them out? Is it possible that many years from now they will become collector's items and will sell for a lot of money again, like some really old vintage vinyl records?
My Tesla does not have a CD player. I don't have a single CD player anywhere in my house. I pay $99/year for Apple Music, which gives me access to virtually every album ever produced, so there is no reason for me to ever want to go back and listen to any of those CDs.
I tried going to the site www.decluttr.com to sell my CDs to them. When I scan them in, about half they have no interest in. The other half have a value of between .17-.22 cents. So if I go to the trouble of scanning them all in and packing them up, I might get $20 for my efforts. It's not worth the trouble to me.
Can anyone provide advice on what to do with these? Would any charity organization want them? Should I just throw them out? Is it possible that many years from now they will become collector's items and will sell for a lot of money again, like some really old vintage vinyl records?