This week has brought with it three more harbingers of record store doom.
First, Prince announced yesterday he’s releasing his new trilogy of albums LOtUSFLOW3R, MPLSoUND and Elixer exclusively at Target stores.
Second, U2 is using a week-long stint on "The Late Show With David Letterman" to promote their new CD, "No Line On The Horizon," because there's no real other way to get the album out there in people's faces for an extended period of time.
And third, Virgin is closing all of its remaining New York record stores by this spring (which you read here today on FOX411), leaving the country's largest city with a smattering of mom-and-pop indie shops, and little else.
So stick a fork in the record store (an admitted misnomer, but never did call them CD stores). It is done.
PHOTO ESSAY: The Top 10 Things We'll Miss About Record Stores.

10. "Talking to the guy who worked there about when the new AC/DC album, or whoever, was coming in. And him being as excited as I was."

9. "Listening to music on headphones." It's weird how cool that feature was when it started. No more headphones at Tower, the chain is kaput.

8. "People watching." John Cusack and Jack Black did some seriosu people watching in "High Fiedlity," about the goings-on at a Chicago record store.

7. "Coming across that old obscure album that you listened to obsessively." Like this offering from The Velvet Underground.

6. "I miss listening to the music playing in the store. A couple of times I wound up buying the music I heard on the speakers." Virgin played their music LOUD.

5. "I will miss the leisure of browsing the endless aisles � more than the music it was the free time just to explore." Or to scope out babes, like Cusack in "High Fiedlity."

4. "Going through the bargain bins."

3. "Amusing oneself by trying to find the most obscure designated section -- Cuban Jazz, Afrobeat, Darkwave."

2. "Buying records just for the cover." Could there be any better reason to buy this one?

1. "Playing with the zipper on the Sticky Fingers album." The original Andy Warhol-designed Rolling Stones album cover had an actual zipper stitched in. You can't play with a zipper on iTunes. You just can't.