Having just transitioned from MD to a solid-state machine, my reaction is pretty much the same as digifish's: don't bother.
I can understand the psychological "need" to have a physical representation (a "master copy") of the recording. It really did feel "wrong" to not have an object to connect with a recording. It was strange not to put "the recording" on a shelf (where, in all likelihood, it would collect dust until my heirs are forced to deal with it).
Then I learned the mysteries of CD-R burning, FLAC, checksums, and Tyvek sleeves.

Seriously, though; I tried to cling to MiniDisc, too, but solid-state is the way things are headed with good reason. Take, for instance, the fact that solid-state media is actually less expensive now than MD (even if you only use it once and then shelve it). For instance; you can buy a 2GB SD card for $5 if you try hard enough. To contrast, Hi-MD media can be found for the same price (if you're buying a 10-pack) and is likely to get more expensive as supplies dwindle (as happened with MD-Data before it). Twice the capacity for roughly the same money? And it's not as if the superiority of solid-state (compared to MiniDisc) ends there.
I use a solid-state (Songcatcher PMD660) machine which has removable media. Unlike Sony's current MD device, it can use off-the-shelf batteries if I need it to. Granted, I paid something less than twice the price of a new RH1 for my PMD660. But I'll not have to concern myself with proprietary Sony batteries or locally scarce media. And I definitely won't worry about fragile disc transports (or repair or maintenance costs for said moving parts). I can record non-stop from sunrise to sunset (with an 8GB card and external power). And the icing on the cake is that the machine has XLR inputs. I think those advantages are worth a few extra dollars. And if money is a concern, a used PMD660 (sans modifications) can be had for about the cost of a new RH1.
@ nameloc01:
I know what you meant but it's really odd that you'd use that term to describe Sony's MD preamps. You see; MiniDisc (and particularly ATRAC) has always sounded like a certain special type of ass to me. Thanks so much for quantifying that for me.
