Have you ever dug through a dresser drawer of socks desperately trying to find a match? Everybody has. Several years ago, before the need for multimedia storage, long before peer to peer networks and TiVo, even before the automobile, people were pretty much the same as we are today, human. However, instead of looking for their favorite CDs and DVDs, they looked for pocket watches and neckerchiefs. But one thing that seems to have bridged the centuries is that these lost items are only discovered to be missing at the last minute, and for some reason we all get sick of the sock drawer and begin to look for a better way to organize. This is how media storage was born.
Today there are many ways to stick our socks in tubes and our ties on racks, and now, our CDs in slots and our hard drives in cabinets (of not meshed wire and aluminum, but fine cherry or walnut and brass). Media storage units, and especially the multimedia storage cabinet, have not only come a long way since sock drawer dividers came to the rescue of prairie homes everywhere, but have become so important in the home, that multimedia storage considerations are common themes in new home building and interior design. No where does this show more than in the showroom furniture designs that roll out by the thousands every year, with multimedia storage as a central theme.
Everything from box style CD and DVD storage containers for the desktop or bedside table, to the media storage cabinet, to complete entertainment systems with lazy Suzan movie and album organization, full length glass doors and additional adjustable shelving, can now be found in shopping carts and living rooms all over the world. The variety and vast options available are not due to marketing glut, but to a continually growing consumer demand, as multimedia storage becomes increasingly important for the entertainment, organization, and personal information storage and retrieval needs of the common household.
There does not seem to be an end to this trend in site. Information is changing hands through computer systems and recording devices at a higher rate than ever before in history. At the same time, the systems that handle this information are getting more compact, portable, and even wearable. This puts an ever increasing demand on local file storage. This demand is often met with the creation of many CDs, DVDs, or other removable media for easy access and transport. This has created the need for personal repositories to keep these items for easy access, safe keeping, and even long term storage.