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Rich Andrews
July 20th 03, 06:26 AM
I am thinking about purchasing a SACD player. Any recommendations? I would
like to keep the price down.

Recommendation at the $3k level?

Recommendation under $1500?

Under $1k?

Thanks

r


--
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from
magic."

Arthur C. Clarke (1917 - ), "Technology and the Future"

George M. Middius
July 20th 03, 06:41 AM
Rich Andrews said:

> I am thinking about purchasing a SACD player. Any recommendations? I would
> like to keep the price down.
>
> Recommendation at the $3k level?
>
> Recommendation under $1500?
>
> Under $1k?

Why don't you just email Krooger to get his "opinion"?

Arny Krueger
July 20th 03, 01:18 PM
"Rich Andrews" > wrote in message
. 44
> I am thinking about purchasing a SACD player. Any recommendations?

> I would like to keep the price down.

> Recommendation at the $3k level?

> Recommendation under $1500?

> Under $1k?

Just wait a while. Sony will eventually give up on the format, and the
players will be cheap because they are obsolete. Either that, or even $39
Chinese DVD players will support it.

Arny Krueger
July 20th 03, 06:32 PM
"dave weil" > wrote in message

> On Sun, 20 Jul 2003 08:18:39 -0400, "Arny Krueger" >
> wrote:
>
>> "Rich Andrews" > wrote in message
>> . 44
>>> I am thinking about purchasing a SACD player. Any recommendations?
>>
>>> I would like to keep the price down.
>>
>>> Recommendation at the $3k level?
>>
>>> Recommendation under $1500?
>>
>>> Under $1k?
>>
>> Just wait a while. Sony will eventually give up on the format, and
>> the players will be cheap because they are obsolete. Either that, or
>> even $39 Chinese DVD players will support it.

> Yes, you should also wait to buy a computer from people like Mr.
> Krueger because eventually they will be a lot faster and cheaper per
> megabyte than they are now.

I often tell that to my clients, and they laugh and buy the computer anyway.

I guess the lesson is that if a piddling little comment like that puts
someone off, they really didn't want the device in the first place.

Arny Krueger
July 20th 03, 06:34 PM
"Rich Andrews" > wrote in message
.44
> "Arny Krueger" > wrote in news:RfOcne-
> :
>
>> "Rich Andrews" > wrote in message
>> . 44
>>> I am thinking about purchasing a SACD player. Any recommendations?
>>
>>> I would like to keep the price down.
>>
>>> Recommendation at the $3k level?
>>
>>> Recommendation under $1500?
>>
>>> Under $1k?
>>
>> Just wait a while. Sony will eventually give up on the format, and
>> the players will be cheap because they are obsolete. Either that, or
>> even $39 Chinese DVD players will support it.

> Why do you think Sony/Philips will give up on the format?

It's going nowhere. It does little or nothing for the listener.

> They may
> eventually, but it will take a long time as it took a long time for
> beta to succumb to VHS.

I think that Sony is operating under different management, now.

> Then they took the Beta format and sold it
> to broadcasters and it was lovingly nicknamed BetaJam.

Like so many things it got replaced by something digital.

> Personally I think the DVD format is entirely too sensitive to dust,
> fingerprints, etc. on the media. That alone is enough of a nuisance
> to me to keep me gun shy. Having to clean something in the middle of
> a listening session really bothers me.

I haven't noticed that DVDs are appreciably more dirt and scratch sensitive
than CDROMs, but YMMV.

George M. Middius
July 20th 03, 06:50 PM
Robot said:

> Personally I think the DVD format is entirely too sensitive to dust,
> fingerprints, etc. on the media. That alone is enough of a nuisance to me to
> keep me gun shy. Having to clean something in the middle of a listening
> session really bothers me.

I agree 100%. Of course, I *never* have to clean a disk after having
started to play it. Maybe you can guess why.

dave weil
July 20th 03, 07:15 PM
On Sun, 20 Jul 2003 13:32:39 -0400, "Arny Krueger" >
wrote:

>"dave weil" > wrote in message

>> On Sun, 20 Jul 2003 08:18:39 -0400, "Arny Krueger" >
>> wrote:
>>
>>> "Rich Andrews" > wrote in message
>>> . 44
>>>> I am thinking about purchasing a SACD player. Any recommendations?
>>>
>>>> I would like to keep the price down.
>>>
>>>> Recommendation at the $3k level?
>>>
>>>> Recommendation under $1500?
>>>
>>>> Under $1k?
>>>
>>> Just wait a while. Sony will eventually give up on the format, and
>>> the players will be cheap because they are obsolete. Either that, or
>>> even $39 Chinese DVD players will support it.
>
>> Yes, you should also wait to buy a computer from people like Mr.
>> Krueger because eventually they will be a lot faster and cheaper per
>> megabyte than they are now.
>
>I often tell that to my clients, and they laugh and buy the computer anyway.

That's because a statement like that is pretty piddling. Nice to see
that you you intereact with your customers in that way.

>I guess the lesson is that if a piddling little comment like that puts
>someone off, they really didn't want the device in the first place.

Nice of you to admit that you are a piddler. And apparently a Luddite.

LOL!

LO"ts!

Margaret von Busenhalter
July 20th 03, 07:50 PM
"Rich Andrews" > wrote in message
. 44...
> I am thinking about purchasing a SACD player. Any recommendations? I
would
> like to keep the price down.
>
> Recommendation at the $3k level?
>
> Recommendation under $1500?
>
> Under $1k?
>
> Thanks
>
> r
>


http://toy.realbuy.ws/B00005NP4L.html


MvB

Daniel
July 21st 03, 01:10 AM
Rich Andrews > wrote in message >...

> Personally I think the DVD format is entirely too sensitive to dust,
> fingerprints, etc. on the media. That alone is enough of a nuisance to me to
> keep me gun shy. Having to clean something in the middle of a listening
> session really bothers me.
>
> r

Rich -

Are you talking about DVD-As, specifically? Or video DVDs as well?

I don't have any DVD-As, but I have noticed my video DVDs seem to
break up (pixillate?) after playing them a couple of times. I'm really
disappointed in this, and I don't know if it means I need a new DVD
player or what.

If this is audio-related (i.e., DVD-As are equally problematic), are
SACDs as vulnerable to dust, fingerprints, etc., as DVD-As?

Thanks.

dangling entity
July 21st 03, 04:08 AM
"Arny Krueger" > wrote in message >...

> I haven't noticed that DVDs are appreciably more dirt and scratch sensitive
> than CDROMs, but YMMV.

I think this issue becomes much more prevalent with regard to rental
DVD's. While the ones we own are typically kept in pristine
condition, the one's you get at say Blockbuster can be anywhere from
brand new to looking like they have been through hell and back. I
would tend to agree that the data density of today's DVDs are
bordering on the extent of being too vulnerable to even the most
innocuous looking of scratches, smudges, or various unidentifiable
gunk. It seems that issue will only get worse in future formats
unless they retreat back to a "cartridged" medium (or perhaps
sacrifice some of that tremendous data capacity for some hardcore data
redundancy/correction capability).

Arny Krueger
July 21st 03, 10:11 AM
"dangling entity" > wrote in message
om
> "Arny Krueger" > wrote in message
> >...
>
>> I haven't noticed that DVDs are appreciably more dirt and scratch
>> sensitive than CDROMs, but YMMV.
>
> I think this issue becomes much more prevalent with regard to rental
> DVD's. While the ones we own are typically kept in pristine
> condition, the one's you get at say Blockbuster can be anywhere from
> brand new to looking like they have been through hell and back. I
> would tend to agree that the data density of today's DVDs are
> bordering on the extent of being too vulnerable to even the most
> innocuous looking of scratches, smudges, or various unidentifiable
> gunk. It seems that issue will only get worse in future formats
> unless they retreat back to a "cartridged" medium (or perhaps
> sacrifice some of that tremendous data capacity for some hardcore data
> redundancy/correction capability).

Hey I watched two Blockbuster-rental DVDs last night. Both played
flawlessly, neither were cleaned. Not an isolated occurrence. Every once in
a while we have to clean one to get it to play flawlessly - maybe 4 per year
of the 50-100 that we rent.

Daniel
July 21st 03, 10:22 AM
(dangling entity) wrote in message >...
> "Arny Krueger" > wrote in message >...
>
> > I haven't noticed that DVDs are appreciably more dirt and scratch sensitive
> > than CDROMs, but YMMV.
>
> I think this issue becomes much more prevalent with regard to rental
> DVD's. While the ones we own are typically kept in pristine
> condition, the one's you get at say Blockbuster can be anywhere from
> brand new to looking like they have been through hell and back. I
> would tend to agree that the data density of today's DVDs are
> bordering on the extent of being too vulnerable to even the most
> innocuous looking of scratches, smudges, or various unidentifiable
> gunk. It seems that issue will only get worse in future formats
> unless they retreat back to a "cartridged" medium (or perhaps
> sacrifice some of that tremendous data capacity for some hardcore data
> redundancy/correction capability).

I've got DVDs I bought, kept perfectly clean AFAIK, and they still
pixillate up during the third viewing. It might be the player, I don't
really know. I'm not much of a video collector, so it's not a big
deal, really. If audio DVDs or SACDs were to do the same thing, that'd
be a *big* reason not to buy them, though.

dangling entity
July 22nd 03, 03:06 AM
"Arny Krueger" > wrote in message >...
> Every once in
> a while we have to clean one to get it to play flawlessly - maybe 4 per year
> of the 50-100 that we rent.

Well, I'm glad you have had such good experiences. OTOH, one
innocuous looking scratch in just the right way can make 30 minutes of
a movie inaccessible. It's really frustrating. I'm sure you will be
quick to point out that my DVD player must be "trash" for me to have
such experiences, as I don't deny that the sophistication of
error-contingency and thus player quality enters into the scenario
somewhere along the line. I did not mean to give the impression that
I've had problem after problem with my setup. I haven't. In fact, it
is quite reliable and troublefree. However, there have been few
occasions in the past where seemingly surmountable disc blemishes turn
out to be anything but. That's when I wonder if the format could have
been made just a bit more bulletproof. Then you compare that to the
worstly abused rental disc you've ever seen (which ends up playing
rather uneventfully, ironically), and you realize that DVD's are far
too naked to be safe from the careless rental customer (that got there
before you). So it's pointless to worry about DVD, as the cat is
already out of the bag, but I hope future, more data-dense medium
formats are born with greater "abuse-contingency" in mind. It's just
a wish. Yours may be different, I understand.

Arny Krueger
July 22nd 03, 11:25 AM
"dangling entity" > wrote in message
m

> "Arny Krueger" > wrote in message
> >...

>> Every once in
>> a while we have to clean one to get it to play flawlessly - maybe 4
>> per year of the 50-100 that we rent.

> Well, I'm glad you have had such good experiences.


> OTOH, one
> innocuous looking scratch in just the right way can make 30 minutes of
> a movie inaccessible.

I've seen a similar thing happen with CDs.

> It's really frustrating. I'm sure you will be
> quick to point out that my DVD player must be "trash" for me to have
> such experiences, as I don't deny that the sophistication of
> error-contingency and thus player quality enters into the scenario
> somewhere along the line.

I've never pictured my Pioneer DV-525 as a paragon of sophistication.

> I did not mean to give the impression that
> I've had problem after problem with my setup. I haven't. In fact, it
> is quite reliable and troublefree. However, there have been few
> occasions in the past where seemingly surmountable disc blemishes turn
> out to be anything but.

Nothing's perfect.

> That's when I wonder if the format could have
> been made just a bit more bulletproof.

It could have been, at a cost in playing time.

> Then you compare that to the
> worstly abused rental disc you've ever seen (which ends up playing
> rather uneventfully, ironically), and you realize that DVD's are far
> too naked to be safe from the careless rental customer (that got there
> before you).

It's up to the rental store to make sure that the product they rent is
usable.

> So it's pointless to worry about DVD, as the cat is
> already out of the bag, but I hope future, more data-dense medium
> formats are born with greater "abuse-contingency" in mind.

I think we've seen a lot of progress in making distribution formats more
reliable and abuse-proof. Compare and contrast the LP and the CD. Compare
and contrast VHS tape and DVD.

> It's just
> a wish. Yours may be different, I understand.

Daniel
July 22nd 03, 05:41 PM
"Geoff Wood" -nospam> wrote in message >...
> "Daniel" > wrote in message >
> > I've got DVDs I bought, kept perfectly clean AFAIK, and they still
> > pixillate up during the third viewing. It might be the player, I don't
> > really know. I'm not much of a video collector, so it's not a big
> > deal, really. If audio DVDs or SACDs were to do the same thing, that'd
> > be a *big* reason not to buy them, though.
>
> I would suggest that you have a porr quality or broken player. Cound be
> just the lens that is soiled...
>
> geoff

How do you clean a dirty lens?

Arny Krueger
July 22nd 03, 05:54 PM
"Daniel" > wrote in message
om
> "Geoff Wood" -nospam> wrote in message
> >...
>> "Daniel" > wrote in message >
>>> I've got DVDs I bought, kept perfectly clean AFAIK, and they still
>>> pixillate up during the third viewing. It might be the player, I
>>> don't really know. I'm not much of a video collector, so it's not a
>>> big deal, really. If audio DVDs or SACDs were to do the same thing,
>>> that'd be a *big* reason not to buy them, though.
>>
>> I would suggest that you have a porr quality or broken player.
>> Cound be just the lens that is soiled...
>>
>> geoff
>
> How do you clean a dirty lens?

Phase 1 is a CD lens cleaning disc.

Daniel
July 23rd 03, 02:18 AM
"Arny Krueger" > wrote in message >...
> "Daniel" > wrote in message
> om
> > "Geoff Wood" -nospam> wrote in message
> > >...
> >> "Daniel" > wrote in message >
> >>> I've got DVDs I bought, kept perfectly clean AFAIK, and they still
> >>> pixillate up during the third viewing. It might be the player, I
> >>> don't really know. I'm not much of a video collector, so it's not a
> >>> big deal, really. If audio DVDs or SACDs were to do the same thing,
> >>> that'd be a *big* reason not to buy them, though.
> >>
> >> I would suggest that you have a porr quality or broken player.
> >> Cound be just the lens that is soiled...
> >>
> >> geoff
> >
> > How do you clean a dirty lens?
>
> Phase 1 is a CD lens cleaning disc.

Ah. Thank you.

Daniel
July 23rd 03, 02:19 AM
"Arny Krueger" > wrote in message >...
> "Daniel" > wrote in message
> om
> > "Geoff Wood" -nospam> wrote in message
> > >...
> >> "Daniel" > wrote in message >
> >>> I've got DVDs I bought, kept perfectly clean AFAIK, and they still
> >>> pixillate up during the third viewing. It might be the player, I
> >>> don't really know. I'm not much of a video collector, so it's not a
> >>> big deal, really. If audio DVDs or SACDs were to do the same thing,
> >>> that'd be a *big* reason not to buy them, though.
> >>
> >> I would suggest that you have a porr quality or broken player.
> >> Cound be just the lens that is soiled...
> >>
> >> geoff
> >
> > How do you clean a dirty lens?
>
> Phase 1 is a CD lens cleaning disc.

Thanks.

dangling entity
July 23rd 03, 06:48 AM
"Arny Krueger" > wrote in message >...
> > "Arny Krueger" > wrote in message
> > >...

>
> I've seen a similar thing happen with CDs.

So I guess that *does* make vinyl superior in the end, whereas such a
scratch would cause a "click" at most, and nowhere near anything on
the order of 30 min of missed music. On a CD, the most I've "lost"
from a scratch was 3.5 minutes for a single song track. More
seriously though, fine, you want to argue that DVD's are just as
useable as CD's when the surface has been scratched or abrased. I'm
just arguing that making them protected from scratches and abrasions
in the first place makes a lot of sense (or making the data recovery
that much more robust), considering the amount of data that will
reside on these future formats. It will make for a more robust format
for the rental store, as well as for original owners. In a perfect
world, none of this would matter, and all discs would be pristine for
playback. In the real world, something more would be desirable, IMO,
to cover the "$hit happens" factor.

>
> > It's really frustrating. I'm sure you will be
> > quick to point out that my DVD player must be "trash" for me to have
> > such experiences, as I don't deny that the sophistication of
> > error-contingency and thus player quality enters into the scenario
> > somewhere along the line.
>
> I've never pictured my Pioneer DV-525 as a paragon of sophistication.
>

Just heading off potential wisecrack comments at the pass.

> > I did not mean to give the impression that
> > I've had problem after problem with my setup. I haven't. In fact, it
> > is quite reliable and troublefree. However, there have been few
> > occasions in the past where seemingly surmountable disc blemishes turn
> > out to be anything but.
>
> Nothing's perfect.

Exactly, so maybe there is another level of quality control that is
worthwhile to address here.

>
> > That's when I wonder if the format could have
> > been made just a bit more bulletproof.
>
> It could have been, at a cost in playing time.
>

It's not like a "5 hr movie" couldn't use *some* editing, anyway. The
sheer capacity of the formats involved here would seem to suggest that
giving some of it up shouldn't cause that much pain at all.

> > Then you compare that to the
> > worstly abused rental disc you've ever seen (which ends up playing
> > rather uneventfully, ironically), and you realize that DVD's are far
> > too naked to be safe from the careless rental customer (that got there
> > before you).
>
> It's up to the rental store to make sure that the product they rent is
> usable.
>

[falls off chair laughing] You would think they should. In actuality,
they don't care until the hapless customer returns to the store to
point out an obviously damaged disc, and they just issue a rental
credit (and you *hope* they don't just turn around and put that disc
right back up on the shelf). There is no way to replace the lost
opportunity to watch the movie the night you originally rented it, but
could not play it, due to a needless scratch.


> > So it's pointless to worry about DVD, as the cat is
> > already out of the bag, but I hope future, more data-dense medium
> > formats are born with greater "abuse-contingency" in mind.
>
> I think we've seen a lot of progress in making distribution formats more
> reliable and abuse-proof. Compare and contrast the LP and the CD. Compare
> and contrast VHS tape and DVD.

See above. Similarly, a drop-out on VHS tape would yield a
momentarily noisey image, whereas the DVD may suffer a 15-30 min
drop-out of the movie (essentially killing the movie). You could
argue anything you want with such a comparison, so asking about
comparisons is a pretty pointless notion. Each format is better and
worse in certain ways, and in response to different failures.

The bottomline is still that it would be nice to see continued
improvements with future formats in data integrity assurance (by
whatever means) in addition to de rigeur improvements to video and
sound performance. Of all, at least make recovery from a "single
scratch" situation a bit more seamless than scenarios such as a
pixel-fubarred frame or outright loss of 15 minutes of video
(essentially a scene chapter as most movies are logically segmented).
I don't think that should be seen as so much to ask for.

Stewart Pinkerton
July 23rd 03, 07:53 AM
On 22 Jul 2003 22:48:35 -0700, (dangling
entity) wrote:

>"Arny Krueger" > wrote in message >...
>> > "Arny Krueger" > wrote in message
>> > >...
>>
>> I've seen a similar thing happen with CDs.
>
>So I guess that *does* make vinyl superior in the end, whereas such a
>scratch would cause a "click" at most, and nowhere near anything on
>the order of 30 min of missed music.

I have *never* seen a similar thing happen with CDs, and I've been
collecting them since 1983. OTOH, I possess no vinyl which does not
have the ocasional click or pop (even though the vast majority of them
have no visible scratches).

OTOH, I *have* experienced such problems with DVDs, although
admittedly I have an old player (Pioneer DV-515). Finally, we write
CD-Rs at work for archiving financial data, and out of around fifteen
thousand that we have produced in the past three years, not one single
disc has shown *any* defects on bit-for-bit file comparisons with the
parallel tape archive.
--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering

Geoff Wood
July 23rd 03, 08:29 AM
"Daniel" > wrote in message
>
> How do you clean a dirty lens?

Dust, stuck on by humidity, static, or gravity. Nicotine, air freshener,
flyspray, and other airbourne agents. Fingerprints, toast.....


geoff

Geoff Wood
July 23rd 03, 08:30 AM
"Geoff Wood" -nospam> wrote in message
...
>
> "Daniel" > wrote in message
> >
> > How do you clean a dirty lens?
>
> Dust, stuck on by humidity, static, or gravity. Nicotine, air freshener,
> flyspray, and other airbourne agents. Fingerprints, toast.....
>


Ooops, misread that as "How do you *get* a dirty lens" ....


g.

Stewart Pinkerton
July 23rd 03, 06:10 PM
On Wed, 23 Jul 2003 15:32:21 +0100, Paul Dormer >
wrote:

(Stewart Pinkerton) wrote:
>
>>..we write
>>CD-Rs at work for archiving financial data, and out of around fifteen
>>thousand that we have produced in the past three years, not one single
>>disc has shown *any* defects on bit-for-bit file comparisons with the
>>parallel tape archive.
>
>This is utter crap.

No, it's basic fact.

> There's no way in hell 15,000 CD's in series would
>be without defect significant enough to make an unrecoverable
>numerical error.

Yes, there is - and they are.

> The bank probably has the discs pre-tested, uses
>non-standard CD-R, or each coaster is discarded as it is uncovered.

We use standard CD-Rs from TDK, and indeed the occasional 'coaster' is
produced and discarded (about one in five hundred IIRC). I was
referring to successfully produced discs which are subsequently
compared for archive verification.

>Do you personally check each CD against the tapes?

No, but I know a man who does. :-)

As this is a relatively new archive, and banks are *very* fussy about
archival media, there's a parallel operation running, and the archive
media are compared on a quarterly basis by the IT storage guys, to
check for deterioration.

> Can you personally
>attest to the "fact" that no disc has been disposed of in this three
>year time period?

Yes, as we'd have been asked to do a reprint.

> Can you buggery - you work in the print department.

We 'print' the CDs, you ignorant ****.

>Probably some bloke with a moustache told you this over a packet of
>crisps at the coffee machine (it's a Clix.. right?) and you took it
>for gospel.

I do have a mouser, but I don't eat crisps, and we have a proper
coffemaker in the office..............

>I wager my house, my car, all my electrical goods that you cannot
>prove what you are saying conclusively.

Bad idea, Dormouse......................

I can easily provide proof of this, as the Bank is strangely sensitive
about the archiving of financial data. It's a legal requirement that
we archive all customer records for a *minimum* of six years, and that
we can provide an *exact* copy of any statement produced over that
period if required for court evidence. We do this all the time in
fraud cases.
--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering

Stewart Pinkerton
July 23rd 03, 06:10 PM
On Wed, 23 Jul 2003 11:09:42 -0500, dave weil >
wrote:

>On Wed, 23 Jul 2003 16:09:44 +0100, Paul Dormer >
>wrote:
>
>>George M. Middius > wrote:
>>
>>>> CD lens cleaning discs typically have a series of minute brushes glued
>>>> or imbedded onto a CD that you play in your machine. They may flick
>>>> off specks of dust that cause intermittent problems, they may also
>>>> irreparably scratch and damage the lens.
>>>
>>>Sounds dreadful. Were they designed by "some bloke with a
>>>moustache"?
>>
>>The designer almost certainly sported a moustache.
>
>And apparently left some of it on the CD cleaner.

LOL! :-)
--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering

George M. Middius
July 23rd 03, 06:43 PM
Paul Dormer said:

> >>>Sounds dreadful. Were they designed by "some bloke with a
> >>>moustache"?
> >>
> >>The designer almost certainly sported a moustache.
> >
> >And apparently left some of it on the CD cleaner.
>
> Exactly!

And I thought you were trolling .... somebody, who knows.... with
your apparent adoption of racialism.

George M. Middius
July 23rd 03, 06:44 PM
Stewart Pinkerton said:

> >>>Sounds dreadful. Were they designed by "some bloke with a
> >>>moustache"?
> >>
> >>The designer almost certainly sported a moustache.
> >
> >And apparently left some of it on the CD cleaner.
>
> LOL! :-)

Any joke at the expense of the wogs sends Pinkie over the edge.

Geoff Wood
July 23rd 03, 08:38 PM
"dave weil" > wrote in message

they designed by "some bloke with a
> >>moustache"?
> >
> >The designer almost certainly sported a moustache.
>
> And apparently left some of it on the CD cleaner.

I always thought they were miniatures of Dolly parton's stick-on eyelashes
....


geoff

Stewart Pinkerton
July 24th 03, 08:05 AM
On Wed, 23 Jul 2003 13:44:31 -0400, George M. Middius
> wrote:

>Stewart Pinkerton said:
>
>> >>>Sounds dreadful. Were they designed by "some bloke with a
>> >>>moustache"?
>> >>
>> >>The designer almost certainly sported a moustache.
>> >
>> >And apparently left some of it on the CD cleaner.
>>
>> LOL! :-)
>
>Any joke at the expense of the wogs sends Pinkie over the edge.

What, you think that only 'wogs' have moustaches? You really are
losing it, Gorge.
--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering

Stewart Pinkerton
July 24th 03, 08:05 AM
On Wed, 23 Jul 2003 13:43:51 -0400, George M. Middius
> wrote:

>Paul Dormer said:
>
>> >>>Sounds dreadful. Were they designed by "some bloke with a
>> >>>moustache"?
>> >>
>> >>The designer almost certainly sported a moustache.
>> >
>> >And apparently left some of it on the CD cleaner.
>>
>> Exactly!
>
>And I thought you were trolling .... somebody, who knows.... with
>your apparent adoption of racialism.

That's 'racism', you cretin. And WTF does it have to do with
moustaches? Was Teddy Roosevelt a 'wog'?
--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering

George M. Middius
July 24th 03, 08:14 AM
Stewart Pinkerton said:

> >> >>>Sounds dreadful. Were they designed by "some bloke with a
> >> >>>moustache"?
> >> >>
> >> >>The designer almost certainly sported a moustache.
> >> >
> >> >And apparently left some of it on the CD cleaner.
> >>
> >> LOL! :-)
> >
> >Any joke at the expense of the wogs sends Pinkie over the edge.
>
> What, you think that only 'wogs' have moustaches?

Pukey, have you met "Powell"? Powell, Pukey's employer needs your
special input.

> You really are losing it, Gorge.

As opposed to you, who hasn't "lost" it? ;-)

osi
July 24th 03, 06:20 PM
George M. Middius wrote:
> WoodBorg said:
> We can thus assume your answer to this audio question, as with all
> others, is to preoccupy oneself with blinding rituals so that one
> no longer notices or cares about the noise?

Don't any of you folk ever tire of your boorish use of the written language?

Or your snobbery?

Tit for tat. Blah, blah, blah.

Arny Krueger
July 24th 03, 06:47 PM
"osi" > wrote in message
e.rogers.com

> George M. Middius wrote:
>> WoodBorg said:
>> We can thus assume your answer to this audio question, as with all
>> others, is to preoccupy oneself with blinding rituals so that one
>> no longer notices or cares about the noise?

> Don't any of you folk ever tire of your boorish use of the written
> language?

Case in point, George Middius. If we could get rid of Middius and his
clique, we could have an audio group again.

> Tit for tat. Blah, blah, blah.

Middius and his clique have made RAO what it is, and they work hard to keep
it that way.

Rich Andrews
July 25th 03, 12:13 PM
"Arny Krueger" > wrote in news:Jv-dnRnAAb6shr2iU-
:

> "osi" > wrote in message
> e.rogers.com
>
>> George M. Middius wrote:
>>> WoodBorg said:
>>> We can thus assume your answer to this audio question, as with all
>>> others, is to preoccupy oneself with blinding rituals so that one
>>> no longer notices or cares about the noise?
>
>> Don't any of you folk ever tire of your boorish use of the written
>> language?
>
> Case in point, George Middius. If we could get rid of Middius and his
> clique, we could have an audio group again.
>
>> Tit for tat. Blah, blah, blah.
>
> Middius and his clique have made RAO what it is, and they work hard to keep
> it that way.
>
>
>

The judicious use of a killfile helps the noise factor a lot. In addition,
when people like Middius get ignored all the time by everyone, they generally
go away or they stay and start talking to themselves. My decision to
killfile GM was after a couple of weeks when he did not make one reasonable
contribution to any discussion.

Why don't you killfile him Arny?

r

--
"Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from
magic."

Arthur C. Clarke (1917 - ), "Technology and the Future"

Arny Krueger
July 25th 03, 01:39 PM
"Rich Andrews" > wrote in message
.44
> "Arny Krueger" > wrote in news:Jv-dnRnAAb6shr2iU-
> :
>
>> "osi" > wrote in message
>> e.rogers.com
>>
>>> George M. Middius wrote:
>>>> WoodBorg said:
>>>> We can thus assume your answer to this audio question, as with all
>>>> others, is to preoccupy oneself with blinding rituals so that one
>>>> no longer notices or cares about the noise?
>>
>>> Don't any of you folk ever tire of your boorish use of the written
>>> language?
>>
>> Case in point, George Middius. If we could get rid of Middius and his
>> clique, we could have an audio group again.
>>
>>> Tit for tat. Blah, blah, blah.
>>
>> Middius and his clique have made RAO what it is, and they work hard
>> to keep it that way.

> The judicious use of a killfile helps the noise factor a lot. In
> addition, when people like Middius get ignored all the time by
> everyone, they generally go away or they stay and start talking to
> themselves.

Often true, proven not to work with Middius. He's got a hatred of me that
simply won't quit.

> My decision to killfile GM was after a couple of weeks
> when he did not make one reasonable contribution to any discussion.

> Why don't you killfile him Arny?

I've effectively done that, to no avail. Middius' RAO career is virtually
built around me. The only thing that can reasonably be expected to stop his
attacks on me is the grim reaper.

Daniel
July 25th 03, 06:31 PM
"Arny Krueger" > wrote in message >...
>
> Middius and his clique have made RAO what it is, and they work hard to keep
> it that way.

Yes. It's all his fault. You have *nothing* to do with it.

George M. Middius
July 25th 03, 06:39 PM
Daniel said:

> > Middius and his clique have made RAO what it is, and they work hard to keep
> > it that way.

> Yes. It's all his fault. You have *nothing* to do with it.

I am powerful. You shall all bow down before me.

Reinaldo Valenzuela
July 29th 03, 02:03 PM
Is there any (objective) evidence of perceptually detectable difference in going
from a CD player like the NAD521i to the better DAC & higher priced 541i?


I have a lot of respect for personal preference and choice.
I -prefer- to go by objective metrics.

Reinaldo

Arny Krueger
July 29th 03, 02:41 PM
"Reinaldo Valenzuela" > wrote in message


> Is there any (objective) evidence of perceptually detectable
> difference in going from a CD player like the NAD521i to the better
> DAC & higher priced 541i?

There could be differences in areas like tracking of damaged discs, or
ergonomics that would be easy to perceive.

However if both players are competently designed, there's no reason to
expect audible differences.


> I have a lot of respect for personal preference and choice.
> I -prefer- to go by objective metrics.

I think that once you rise above the junk, you can choose CD players based
on things like ergonomics, any information you can glean about how they
handle suboptimal discs, and appearance. I don't see any evidence suggesting
that any current NAD player is junk.

Chemical_Brother
July 29th 03, 07:49 PM
I recently auditioned both the 521 and 541i. I loved the 521, and
though I didn't test any HDCD discs, I thought the 521 sounded just as
good as its elder brother for red books. Moreover, you save two
hundred bucks.

And Arny would recommend that you buy yourself some good interconnects
and speaker cables with the money saved.

LOL.

Reinaldo Valenzuela > wrote in message >...
> Is there any (objective) evidence of perceptually detectable difference in going
> from a CD player like the NAD521i to the better DAC & higher priced 541i?
>
>
> I have a lot of respect for personal preference and choice.
> I -prefer- to go by objective metrics.
>
> Reinaldo

Bruce J. Richman
July 29th 03, 09:26 PM
Chemical Brotrher wrote:


>I recently auditioned both the 521 and 541i. I loved the 521, and
>though I didn't test any HDCD discs, I thought the 521 sounded just as
>good as its elder brother for red books. Moreover, you save two
>hundred bucks.
>
>And Arny would recommend that you buy yourself some good interconnects
>and speaker cables with the money saved.
>
>LOL.
>

Actually, with the 200 dollars you might save, you could probably get a nice
turntable/arm combination on the used market. (Assuming you don't already have
this pleasure).

LOL!

BTW, I hope you're not related to Chemical Ali from Iraq :(









>Reinaldo Valenzuela > wrote in message
>...
>> Is there any (objective) evidence of perceptually detectable difference in
>going
>> from a CD player like the NAD521i to the better DAC & higher priced 541i?
>>
>>
>> I have a lot of respect for personal preference and choice.
>> I -prefer- to go by objective metrics.
>>
>> Reinaldo
>
>
>
>
>
>
>


Bruce J. Richman

George M. Middius
July 29th 03, 10:06 PM
Bruce J. Richman said:

> BTW, I hope you're not related to Chemical Ali from Iraq :(

More likely he's a fan of the band Chemical Brothers.

Schizoid Man
July 29th 03, 10:23 PM
"George M. Middius" > wrote in message
> Bruce J. Richman said:
>
> > BTW, I hope you're not related to Chemical Ali from Iraq :(
>
> More likely he's a fan of the band Chemical Brothers.

I sure am. Chemical Brother is my Google sockpuppet. That being said, they
are mates from the British Midlands.

You should check them out sometime, they are very good and tour the States
frequently.

--
"And am back with another one of those block rocking beats..."

Schizoid Man
July 29th 03, 10:25 PM
"Bruce J. Richman" > wrote in message
...
> Chemical Brother wrote:

<snip>
>
> BTW, I hope you're not related to Chemical Ali from Iraq :(

No relation to that filthy personification of evil whatsoever. What ever
became of him? Did the Brits really get him?

Bruce J. Richman
July 30th 03, 01:10 AM
Schizoid Man wrote:


>"Bruce J. Richman" > wrote in message
...
>> Chemical Brother wrote:
>
><snip>
>>
>> BTW, I hope you're not related to Chemical Ali from Iraq :(
>
>No relation to that filthy personification of evil whatsoever. What ever
>became of him? Did the Brits really get him?
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>

From what I've read, his status is still not resolved. He was originally
delcared dead, but apparently, no identification of his remains has yet been
made, so his fate is in doubt.




Bruce J. Richman