Happy Birthday! Funnily enough, it's the complete opposite for me. If I want, I can download (theoretically, at least) any track - no matter how rare - from an FTP site such as Rob's and it won't fade or scratch no matter how much I play it. Also, I've copied most of my collection onto iTunes now but I only find myself playing Chill Out or The White Room anyway - both of which came from CD. For me, owning the records is just the same as for people who collect stamps, butterflies, rare plants, car numberplates, those Hazchem signs off petrol tankers or anything else for that matter. You could have an album full of photocopies of stamps, a book full of pictures of butterfiles, or just buy the Hazchem stickers from the supplier, but where's the fun in that? Of course, it is a shame that my collection is hidden away in a number of (very heavy) metal record boxes so it's not quite as accessible as a stamp album might be, but you can't have everything. I think I might trim it down a bit over the next few months, sell of some of the duplicates (I have 5 copies of Pure Trance 5 and 10 copies of "1987" - all original), etc. but that will be that. Finally, I've decided what to do with my collection when I've had enough of it. I'm going to drive it out to a field (probably not Stockholm; more likely Welford), set it on fire, film it and release the film as 'Watch Some Bloke Watch The KLF Burn', or something like that. I think it will be a fitting tribute...