>It's ridiculous in a world of 5K retina screens that people can't see the value in higher resolution audio.
Not if they can't hear the value in higher resolution audio. For many people the only difference in HD audio over 16-bit 44.1 Khz is that the files are bigger. If someone can't hear the difference, it's no surprise that they don't care to move to a new format.
The screen analogy isn't perfect as most people can still readily tell the difference between an HD image and a significantly lower resolution one. (Though yeah, we're getting closer to pixel densities surpassing people's ability to resolve pixels as well, provided they're not putting their nose to the screen. It won't be too long now.)
There's a difference between not being able to hear and not knowing what to listen for. Listen to the highs on a well tuned hi-fi system and you can hear the difference between CD and SACD. Listen for the sound of a singer taking a breath or the slow ring of a cymbal. If you've never heard these things in person to begin with then you're at a disadvantage trying to hear how badly they are represented in recording technology from the 1980s.
Don't argue from a position of ignorance. Make friends with a recording engineer and have them play you a 32bit mix followed by a 16 bit mixdown.
Not if they can't hear the value in higher resolution audio. For many people the only difference in HD audio over 16-bit 44.1 Khz is that the files are bigger. If someone can't hear the difference, it's no surprise that they don't care to move to a new format.
The screen analogy isn't perfect as most people can still readily tell the difference between an HD image and a significantly lower resolution one. (Though yeah, we're getting closer to pixel densities surpassing people's ability to resolve pixels as well, provided they're not putting their nose to the screen. It won't be too long now.)