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"paul packer" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 06:40:56 GMT, "
wrote:


Sure about that? You mean if you just spent 10,000 on an amp and a
mag told you it was crap, and backed that conclusion up with figures,
and insisted that all the reviewers on the mag were in agreement that
it was total feces and sounded nothing like music...you mean that
wouldn't have the slightest effect on your post-purchase pleasure?


Thankfully, we don't have to worry about such an event becuase we already
know that the overwhelming majority of audio equipment sounds alike.


Well, you do, anyway. My point was that it's impossible not to be
influenced by others.


Sure it is, especially if you know they are wrong.

There's a saying: "Any conviction gains
infinitely the moment another begins to believe in it."


Those who beleive that there are gigantic differences in the sound of audio
equipment, probably, those who know what the blind comparsions have shown,
not so much.

You could also
say, "Every conviction is subject to doubt the moment someone
expresses a contrary opinion." George claims a negative review
wouldn't affect his listening pleasure. I don't believe it, but I'd
like to hear other input.

It wouldn't affect me either, and I suspect it's for the same reason. I
stopped caring about audio as a status symbol 25 years ago, when I learned
that most of what was being said about sonic differences was bull****.


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"paul packer" wrote in message
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On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 06:59:11 GMT, "
wrote:


I'm not being taken in by fraudulent claims, so I'm not a victim.
I also don't have the kind of resources one would need to fight and win
such a case.
It might be interesting to see if there's a firm that would consider a
pro bono case, perhaps a class action suit against Atkinson, et al.

Surely there must be such a law firm as Class Envy and Borg


If you think my disdain for SP and their delude believers has to with
class
envy, you are most assuredly wrong. I just don't like trying to decieve
people. I think the best thing for audio magazines or any hobby magazine
is
to maximize the enjoyment by giving recomendations that will actually
improve performance. If there were something besides loudspeakers, room
treatment and EQ that would likely improve the sound of a system, I'd be
all
for it. The simple fact is there aren't.

I certainly don't begrudge anyone spending as much as they can afford on
whatever they want for whatever reason they want, but I do think they
ought
to be getting the best possible advice before they make the purchase.

Whatever advances that might be possible will most likely come from
somewhere other than the ultra expensive, small volume manufacturers,
since
they don't have the resources for the research that would produce such
improvements.

When people flat out lie about the perfomance improvements that a peice of
equipment, it's my feeling that such information shoud be challenged. If
manufacturers want to chare high prices for gear they ought to expect
challenges. Aside from liking the way one peice of gear looks as opposed
to another, why would anyone want tos spend more monye than needed to
achieve the same performance. Do you think they'd sell more VW's of they
performed exactly the way Porsche does? Do you tink if someone made a car
that performed exactly the way a Porsce does that they'd likely sell
plenty?

It's not about envy, it's always been about the truth of the claims.


Very good. But I wonder if you object as strongly to the claims made
by mini and micro systems manufacturers and retailers that these
systems are true hi-fi, sound brilliant and will fulfil all your
expectations about sound reproduction forever.


From what I know about them, ( I don't have any interest in them, so I don't
pay any attention) there are 2 classes:
1. I call drug store stereo, that just crap with even worse speakers.
2. Small but real hi-fi components that have limited power and very low end
speakers.
Take away the crap speakers and connect some good ones not driven to
clipping and
they can sound as good as any other hi-fi.


Surely if you're
looking for charlatans in the audio industry this where most of them
hang out. Personally I don't believe that expensive cables make much
if any difference, but they do after all appeal to the well heeled
afficianado, not the first time buyer unable to make an informed
decision. What galls me about the marketing of micros, midis & minis
is that it effectively syphons off all the potential customers for
real hi-fi (or at least it did, until HT began to do that even more
effectively). I wonder how many innocents have listened to their first
mini system plastered with the word "Hi-Fi" and thought, "Well if
that's hi-fi it's waaaay overrated. I thought it was s'posed to sound
like a real band."


Limitations on placement and price are IMO the main reason anybody buys this
kind of stuff.

Perhaps if you gave me some brands and models I could give you a better
answer.
I doubt that most people are gullible enough to beleive that boom boxes and
such will give them the same sound as a decent setup with good speakers.


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"ScottW" wrote in message
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Clyde Slick wrote:
"ScottW" wrote in message
news:YqbRe.99627$Ep.64584@lakeread02...

"Clyde Slick" wrote in message
...

"ScottW" wrote in message
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"Clyde Slick" wrote in message
...



You just said earlier "WHERE ANYONE EVER HEARD A DIFFERENCE"

Come on Art... a perfectly random trial will have half the
participants
over 50%.
One coming in at 81% one time doesn't sound like its outside the
expected
distribution for random responses of 15 participants.

Bad work, you fiind one person who can hear, and fourteen
who can't, test them, then disregard the result of that one, for
the deficiencies of the other fourteen.

Back to school you ole fart. Enroll in probability 101

Look at it this way. Test the same guy 15 times.
He just might do very well one of those 15 times.
Was his hearing better that one time than all the others?


That is not the way to look at it.
That is one person, he is unique.
The question is whether he heard differences.


Exactly. And now Ludovic has clarified that there were repeat trials
and his 83% number is a composite from all the trials...not just one
trial.

In the end... he has indicated they did EXACTLY what I said was
necessary to provide proof. Although 10 responses per trial is a bit
low...being able to
respond accurately in repeat trials is definitely significant.
Being able to respond accurately in one trial is not.


Its really just a matter of binary probability.
Give someone enough tries and they will get a decent
percentage right. Most tests are done to 90%
or 95% confidence. That still means that 1 of 10
or 1 of 20 times the results will be a false positive.
So you can see 1 positive subject out of 15 subjects
could very well be due to chance.


sure, but chances are very substantial that one person heard differences
and
fourteen did not.


the initial 83% number was insufficient data to make that claim and I
still
can't access the original article.

Just cause differences are there, doesn't mean that everyone
has the capacity to recognize them.


Agreed.


chances are one out of fifty that any one person has at least a 132 IQ.


Yes... but a single IQ test of 10 questions won't guarantee you found
him.


chances are pretty good that at least one person in a group of fifty has
an IQ of 132.


Sure...and probably 3 in 50 will ace a 10 question IQ test. Now what?


but those are two different issues.


He must be tested again and the odds
of him succeeding again due to chance go to 1 in 100
or 1 in 400.
Now thats proof.


Not everyone is equal.

Never said they were.






If we knew the number of trials we could figure it out exactly but
reality is...
one positive trial doesn't prove anything, even one 100% correct.


It proves it for that one person.

Not true. We can actually expect one or even 2 persons to get
lucky in a group of 15 with a 90% confidence test. Its the odds.
Let him repeat the test. If he is truly gifted he should
be able to repeat. If not... then it was probably random chance or
luck.


even with one run of tests the odds are very substantial
that it was not chance.



Maybe for 100% correct or even 9 of 10. But for 8 of 10 the numbers
don't bear you out. In fact... in one test run... say 10 responses...
you have ~4.3% chance of getting 8 of 10 just due to chance. So with
15 subjects we would expect that 64% of the time (more than half) one
of the 15 is gonna get 8 right.
I'm sorry but you have less than 1 chance in 2 that the 1 person with
8 right (of 15 who were tested) is truly golden eared after a one run
of tests.

Heres a good tutorial.

http://www.fourmilab.ch/rpkp/experim...tatistics.html


By my math, I get 5.5% chance of getting at least 8 out of 10 right, and the
chance that at least one out of 15 will do that well is 57%

Norm Strong


  #244   Report Post  
 
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Arny Krueger wrote:
"Clyde Slick" wrote in message


I think the word falsely should be replaced with
erroneously.


Wrong, it was a willful act of deception on Arny's part.


Delusions of omniscience and all that noted.

Even granting the assumption that someone
did send it to him, he accused at least
ten different people of being that person, without ANY
evidence at all.


There was plenty of evidence - the nature of the attack, the
past attacks of a similar nature that were tracable, the
technical skills it took to launch it, the people who tried
to cover it up. You're as dirty as anybody, Art.

And it wasn't kiddie porn anyway, according to Arnir.
you would think he would know the difference
between waht a child and what an adult looks like.


The legal definition of kiddie porn is quite exact. A person
changes from an illegal subject to a legal subject in one
day.


Obviously it was all a lie anyway, His story is so full
of holes and contradictions.


Not at all. Furthermore the attempts to show that I made the
story up had plenty of holes in them.

Two words: Jamie Benchimol.



Two more words: "Leon North", the self-appointed, self-proclaimed,
uncredentialed "internet expert".


Does anyone else find it just a wee bit odd that "Leon North" made his
*first ever* Usenet appearance by posting to RAO on September, 11, 2001?

  #245   Report Post  
 
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"paul packer" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 08:42:05 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote:

"paul packer" wrote in message


Very good. But I wonder if you object as strongly to the
claims made by mini and micro systems manufacturers and
retailers that these systems are true hi-fi, sound
brilliant and will fulfil all your expectations about
sound reproduction forever.


These claims are probably relevant for certain people.


Certain people? Most people seeking a "hi-fi system" who don't
bother to acquaint themselves with what hi-fi means. And that means
nearly everybody.


I doubt that there are many people who don't understand that it means
faithful to the original. They might have some confusion about which is the
original, since there are many people who don't understand it means faithful
to the master, not to an actual event, which in many cases never happened.

Surely if you're looking for
charlatans in the audio industry this where most of them
hang out.


I don't know if that is a slam dunk.


Explanation?

Personally I don't believe that expensive
cables make much if any difference,


Notice the hedge, apparently faith springs eternal.


I fear this says something important about you, Arnie. Most people
like to leave room for a doubt. Remember what I said (or rather, Mr.
Ustinov said) about the inability to have a doubt?


There is no real doubt that cables of similar construction have no sonic
difference.

but they do after all
appeal to the well heeled afficianado, not the first time
buyer unable to make an informed decision.


I don't know about your neck of the woods, but high priced
cables can be found in just about every audio retail store
in the US, including electronics stores and appliance
stores.


Are you suggesting that the average buyer of a mini system is likely
to purchase Monster cable to go with it?

Depends on the salesman and if the customer believes that it would improve
the sound.

What galls me
about the marketing of micros, midis & minis is that it
effectively syphons off all the potential customers for
real hi-fi


People who buy this stuff are looking for a packaged
solution. Where they fade out, HTIB systems pick up.


They're looking for a packaged solution because they've been convinced
the package will supply their need. This is called marketing.

Most of the people who buy this sort of stuff are less concerned about
ultimate hi-fi, they want something that's better than what they have which
is usually nothing. If they care about quality sound they will upgrade to
better speakers.

(or at least it did, until HT began to do that even more
effectively).


Higher-end HT seems to be shaping up as being like a better
set of speakers for that shiney new HDTV.


HT is swallowing hi-fi whole.


Not IMO, it's keeping it alive and thriving. It will eventually lead to
better sounding, (more realistic presentation) stereo.

Few people care to have two systems, one
for HT and one for audio. Ergo, the HT has to do for both. And in the
minds of most punters, why should it not?

Indeed why not? You shut off the speakers that aren't needed and you have a
hi-fi that's as good as the speakers connected.


I wonder how many innocents have
listened to their first mini system plastered with the
word "Hi-Fi" and thought, "Well if that's hi-fi it's
waaaay overrated. I thought it was s'posed to sound like
a real band."


Probably not many at all. Who would be that naive?


Get into the real world, Arnie. As I said before, you've been slaving
over that hot test bench too long.


I think you underestimate your fellow humans.




  #246   Report Post  
Arny Krueger
 
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wrote in message
oups.com
Arny Krueger wrote:
"Clyde Slick" wrote in message


I think the word falsely should be replaced with
erroneously.


Wrong, it was a willful act of deception on Arny's part.


Delusions of omniscience and all that noted.

Even granting the assumption that someone
did send it to him, he accused at least
ten different people of being that person, without ANY
evidence at all.


There was plenty of evidence - the nature of the attack,
the past attacks of a similar nature that were tracable,
the technical skills it took to launch it, the people
who tried to cover it up. You're as dirty as anybody,
Art.

And it wasn't kiddie porn anyway, according to Arnir.
you would think he would know the difference
between waht a child and what an adult looks like.


The legal definition of kiddie porn is quite exact. A
person changes from an illegal subject to a legal
subject in one day.


Obviously it was all a lie anyway, His story is so full
of holes and contradictions.


Not at all. Furthermore the attempts to show that I made
the story up had plenty of holes in them.


Two words: Jamie Benchimol.


Two more words: "Leon North", the self-appointed,
self-proclaimed, uncredentialed "internet expert".


Yes, he was Jamie's right hand boy.

Does anyone else find it just a wee bit odd that "Leon
North" made his *first ever* Usenet appearance by posting
to RAO on September, 11, 2001?


Very odd, if he was truely an internet expert.

His tone suggested that he had origins similar to that of
who, Fear3000?


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"Clyde Slick" wrote in message
...

" wrote in message
nk.net...

"Clyde Slick" wrote in message
...

wrote in message
oups.com...

Clyde Slick wrote:
" wrote in message
ink.net...

"Clyde Slick" wrote in message
...

" wrote in message
ink.net...

"Clyde Slick" wrote in message
...

" wrote in message
ink.net...


That you say that "no one has ever heard a difference.....81% is
within
probablitity",
that probability for it being chance is very small indeed. You
are
claiming only
5% of the ground. Your knees must be wobbling.

My understanding is that there were 15 trials for that person, in
each
of
six runs, and that he had an 81% or 83% correct score (73 or 75
out of
90).
I don't know the confidence level of that result, but I would
think it
is in the
85 to 95% range, which indicates it is MUCH more likely that he
heard
a difference than that the result was by chance

But, I know that you won't except that.

u r kerect, i wont except that.

Even if the confidence level were
80%, it is four times more likely that the result indicates the
ability
to
discern a diference, than the result coming up by chance.



Note, wire is wire. If you want to challenge the idea, take up
the
$5000.00 challenge being discussed on RAHE. So far the magic wire
people have let it sit for years, obviously their confidence level
is
somewhat lower than 95%.


The results of the six tests on the subject were
reportedly 15/15, 15/15, 15/15, 15/15, 12/15, and 10/15.
Scott W. accepted that as statistically significant.
Do you?


Yes, but I'd want to know more about the wire being compared, since
no one
is arguing that wire can't affect the sound, only that 2 different
wires
of simialr construction can't.

There are still people claiming that there is a problem with skin
effect
in audio cables, do you think they have a case?


High end wire is not of similar construction to mass market wire.


Aside from possible differences in durability, if they are audibly
identical, who cares?


"if" they are.
My experience in sighted evaluation is that there
are differences for some of them, but not substantial differences, and
the it is not cost effective for me to deal with it. I just buy
better sounding equipment, it makes a more substantial difference.
I fel the same way about most of what the borgs call tweak equipment
like poweer line conditioners, etc. But I reserve to others
to find for themselves what they will.

I've always said that the piece of equipment that
improves my sound the most is my record cleaner.


BOB MOREIN, where is your condemnation of Arts' posts and attacks on his
IQ? This post of his is full of errors. Aren't you going to tell him how
low his IQ is.


Its about content. Yours is woefully lacking


Bul****, his most recent posts have nothing to with content, he's become
Middius without the charisma, just pointing out spelling errors. If I had
made the post you made, he would have commented on the errors. And speaking
of lacking in content, what are most of your posts?


  #248   Report Post  
Arny Krueger
 
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" wrote in
message
nk.net
"Clyde Slick" wrote in message
...

" wrote in
message


BOB MOREIN, where is your condemnation of Arts' posts
and attacks on his IQ? This post of his is full of
errors. Aren't you going to tell him how low his IQ is.


It's where Bob's ethics are - where the sun shines not.

Its about content. Yours is woefully lacking


Bul****, his most recent posts have nothing to with
content, he's become Middius without the charisma, just
pointing out spelling errors.


When you're talking less charisma than Middius, you're
really scraping the bottom. But you're right.

If I had made the post you
made, he would have commented on the errors.


Yeah, but Art's posts pour healing oil on Bob's vendetta
against me.

And speaking of lacking in content, what are most of your
posts?


Let's not go there. Opps, we're there already.

Art is getting older and some people become more childish
when they are older. I remember Art' posts from years ago,
and he used to be able to at least suggest the appearance of
content.


  #249   Report Post  
Stewart Pinkerton
 
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On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:17:18 -0400, "Clyde Slick"
wrote:


" wrote in message
link.net...


Then why would something like CD stoplight make the RCL? It has no value
at all, in fact the whole green ink thing was the result of an April Fools
Day prank.


Well, I tried it on a number of cd's, and it made most of those
a little worse sounding.


Bull**** - you always had an overly vivid imagination, sad Sack.

--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering
  #250   Report Post  
Stewart Pinkerton
 
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On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:18:57 -0400, "Clyde Slick"
wrote:

" wrote in message
link.net...


When people flat out lie about the perfomance improvements that a peice of
equipment, it's my feeling that such information shoud be challenged. If
manufacturers want to chare high prices for gear they ought to expect
challenges. Aside from liking the way one peice of gear looks as opposed
to another, why would anyone want tos spend more monye than needed to
achieve the same performance. Do you think they'd sell more VW's of they
performed exactly the way Porsche does? Do you tink if someone made a car
that performed exactly the way a Porsce does that they'd likely sell
plenty?


They do - the VW Touareg and Porsche Cayenne are the *same* car.

It's not about envy, it's always been about the truth of the claims.


if not class envy, it is about hearing caability envy.
Sorry for your misfortune. "At least" it saves you a good bit of money.


And your imagination costs you money. Why is it always the clowns like
you who claim to have Golden Ears - but cry foul if asked to *prove*
their hearing capability?

--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering


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Arny Krueger
 
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"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message

On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:17:18 -0400, "Clyde Slick"
wrote:


" wrote in
message
ink.net...


Then why would something like CD stoplight make the
RCL? It has no value at all, in fact the whole green
ink thing was the result of an April Fools Day prank.


Well, I tried it on a number of cd's, and it made most
of those a little worse sounding.


Bull**** - you always had an overly vivid imagination,
sad Sack.


Based on Sackman's lengthy and volumnous history of
over-the-edge postings, maybe he carried that philosoply
into his CD treatments.


  #252   Report Post  
dave weil
 
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On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 17:28:14 +0000 (UTC), Stewart Pinkerton
wrote:

On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:18:57 -0400, "Clyde Slick"
wrote:

" wrote in message
hlink.net...


When people flat out lie about the perfomance improvements that a peice of
equipment, it's my feeling that such information shoud be challenged. If
manufacturers want to chare high prices for gear they ought to expect
challenges. Aside from liking the way one peice of gear looks as opposed
to another, why would anyone want tos spend more monye than needed to
achieve the same performance. Do you think they'd sell more VW's of they
performed exactly the way Porsche does? Do you tink if someone made a car
that performed exactly the way a Porsce does that they'd likely sell
plenty?


They do - the VW Touareg and Porsche Cayenne are the *same* car.


Until you look at the motors. That has more than a little to do with
"performance".

Sorry you know so little about cars.
  #253   Report Post  
Lionel
 
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dave weil a écrit :
On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 17:28:14 +0000 (UTC), Stewart Pinkerton
wrote:


On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:18:57 -0400, "Clyde Slick"
wrote:


" wrote in message
thlink.net...


When people flat out lie about the perfomance improvements that a peice of
equipment, it's my feeling that such information shoud be challenged. If
manufacturers want to chare high prices for gear they ought to expect
challenges. Aside from liking the way one peice of gear looks as opposed
to another, why would anyone want tos spend more monye than needed to
achieve the same performance. Do you think they'd sell more VW's of they
performed exactly the way Porsche does? Do you tink if someone made a car
that performed exactly the way a Porsce does that they'd likely sell
plenty?


They do - the VW Touareg and Porsche Cayenne are the *same* car.



Until you look at the motors. That has more than a little to do with
"performance".

Sorry you know so little about cars.


LOL I bet that *you* can make the difference between :

Porsche Cayenne : Cayenne Turbo 450 ch - 620 Nm.
0 to 100 km/H : 5,6 secondes

VW Touareg W12 : 450 ch - 600 Nm
0 to 100 km/H : 5,9 secondes

BTW 99% of the drivers would not make any
difference between the V10 TDI (313ch) and the W12, so...

I'm sorry *you* know so little about cars, Dave.

:-)

  #254   Report Post  
dave weil
 
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On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 21:32:04 +0200, Lionel
wrote:

dave weil a écrit :
On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 17:28:14 +0000 (UTC), Stewart Pinkerton
wrote:


On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:18:57 -0400, "Clyde Slick"
wrote:


" wrote in message
rthlink.net...

When people flat out lie about the perfomance improvements that a peice of
equipment, it's my feeling that such information shoud be challenged. If
manufacturers want to chare high prices for gear they ought to expect
challenges. Aside from liking the way one peice of gear looks as opposed
to another, why would anyone want tos spend more monye than needed to
achieve the same performance. Do you think they'd sell more VW's of they
performed exactly the way Porsche does? Do you tink if someone made a car
that performed exactly the way a Porsce does that they'd likely sell
plenty?

They do - the VW Touareg and Porsche Cayenne are the *same* car.



Until you look at the motors. That has more than a little to do with
"performance".

Sorry you know so little about cars.


LOL I bet that *you* can make the difference between :

Porsche Cayenne : Cayenne Turbo 450 ch - 620 Nm.
0 to 100 km/H : 5,6 secondes

VW Touareg W12 : 450 ch - 600 Nm
0 to 100 km/H : 5,9 secondes

BTW 99% of the drivers would not make any
difference between the V10 TDI (313ch) and the W12, so...

I'm sorry *you* know so little about cars, Dave.


When you learn the meaning of the English word "exactly", please get
back to me.

  #255   Report Post  
Lionel
 
Posts: n/a
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dave weil a écrit :
On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 21:32:04 +0200, Lionel
wrote:


dave weil a écrit :

On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 17:28:14 +0000 (UTC), Stewart Pinkerton
wrote:



On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:18:57 -0400, "Clyde Slick"
wrote:



" wrote in message
arthlink.net...

When people flat out lie about the perfomance improvements that a peice of
equipment, it's my feeling that such information shoud be challenged. If
manufacturers want to chare high prices for gear they ought to expect
challenges. Aside from liking the way one peice of gear looks as opposed
to another, why would anyone want tos spend more monye than needed to
achieve the same performance. Do you think they'd sell more VW's of they
performed exactly the way Porsche does? Do you tink if someone made a car
that performed exactly the way a Porsce does that they'd likely sell
plenty?

They do - the VW Touareg and Porsche Cayenne are the *same* car.


Until you look at the motors. That has more than a little to do with
"performance".

Sorry you know so little about cars.


LOL I bet that *you* can make the difference between :

Porsche Cayenne : Cayenne Turbo 450 ch - 620 Nm.
0 to 100 km/H : 5,6 secondes

VW Touareg W12 : 450 ch - 600 Nm
0 to 100 km/H : 5,9 secondes

BTW 99% of the drivers would not make any
difference between the V10 TDI (313ch) and the W12, so...

I'm sorry *you* know so little about cars, Dave.



When you learn the meaning of the English word "exactly", please get
back to me.


Oh, oh Dave is vexed.

My point was about performance :
"That has more than a little to do with "performance".

When you learn to read, please get back too me. ;-)



  #256   Report Post  
dave weil
 
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On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 22:06:14 +0200, Lionel
wrote:

Porsche Cayenne : Cayenne Turbo 450 ch - 620 Nm.
0 to 100 km/H : 5,6 secondes

VW Touareg W12 : 450 ch - 600 Nm
0 to 100 km/H : 5,9 secondes

BTW 99% of the drivers would not make any
difference between the V10 TDI (313ch) and the W12, so...

I'm sorry *you* know so little about cars, Dave.



When you learn the meaning of the English word "exactly", please get
back to me.


Oh, oh Dave is vexed.

My point was about performance :
"That has more than a little to do with "performance".

When you learn to read, please get back too me. ;-)


Who cares WHAT your point was about? But since you asked, .3 of a
second IS a difference. Whether or not YOU think that a certain
percentage of drivers might or might not notice is stupid. That
difference could mean the difference between life and death.

Now, quit interferring before I DO get "vexed".
  #258   Report Post  
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Your corection is accurate: I was writing from
memory- my memory for figures is just as poor as my arithmetics are
in general. My respect for medical research statisticians is
theoretical not, God forbids, hands on :
If the "golden ear" had really got 15 "hits" four times I
should have said that his score was a much better one namely 91% (my
calculator tells me) not 83% that I reported. Odd that you did not
include this in your account of my perfidy. Or do you make errors as
well sometimes?.

Here is Greenhill's table. If it is confusing blame Google. I tried
to arrange it cleanly but could not.
SUBJECTS: A B C D E F G H I J K
Test1: Monster vs. 24 g. wire,Pink noise
15 14 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15
2. Same but levels matched
9 13 7 10 na. 8 9 6 14 12 12
3. Monster vs. 16 gauge zipcord, Pink noise
13 7 10 7 11 12 9 9 11 12 7
4.. 16 ga vs. 24 ga., Pink noise
15 15 na. 14 15 na 15 14 15 15 15
5. Monster vs. 16ga., choral music
4 6 11 8 9 5 5 7 6 10 10
6. Monster vs. 24ga, choral music
14 7 15 10 8 10 6 10 11 12 10
______________________________________________
% of "hits" in the total of 6 tests 90 tries:


67. 50 40 33 40 40 33 33 50? 83 50



I am not prepared to lay my
life down for Greenhill's "golden ear"- once again the description is
Greenhill's not mine. Nor will I comment on your disagreement with his
statistics. The entire subject was thrashed out ad nauseam in the RAHE
2 years ago and I regret restarting it. While obviously you're not
bending over backwards to make allowances I have no quarrel with your
forum manners. I quoted Greenhill only as a bait to someone who
pontificated on the subject that he obviously knew little about. But
the topic brings out of the woodwork several creatures that I find
repulsive.
I note that you do not mention any ABX
component comparison studies that would meet your statistical
standards. Even the negative ones like Greenhill's or- dream on- just
one with a POSITIVE outcome.
Where is the research to validate the claims?
My comments are as follows:
1) Your comment that it is "no proof of
exceptional ability" is fair.The "golden ear's" performance may have
been sheer one time luck. ABXing I think fox the temporal lobes of the
brain. It does it to me. I find it funny that the ABXers are up in arms
when someone, just one man, is said to have done well when ABXing. They
should be cheering. Of course he inconsiderately did it comparing
cables and we know what cables are in the ABXers vocabulary.
2) All the panelists did well comparing
uneven diameter cables when pink noise was played to them. The scores
were much worse when music was used as a signal and became awful when
similar diameters were used. Oddly I'm interested in music not pink
noise.
3) I understand that 16 Gauge vs. 24
gauge over 50" means 1,70db volume difference. Six out of eleven
panelists failed to hear this difference in 5 (out of fifteen) tries
or more. I have, with my elderly ears, no difficulty hearing 1db volume
difference between the two speakers when my stepped volume control is
moved without my knowledge- but of course I'm not ABXing.
Ludovic Mirabel

  #259   Report Post  
Stewart Pinkerton
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 13:16:22 -0500, dave weil
wrote:

On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 17:28:14 +0000 (UTC), Stewart Pinkerton
wrote:

On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:18:57 -0400, "Clyde Slick"
wrote:

" wrote in message
thlink.net...


When people flat out lie about the perfomance improvements that a peice of
equipment, it's my feeling that such information shoud be challenged. If
manufacturers want to chare high prices for gear they ought to expect
challenges. Aside from liking the way one peice of gear looks as opposed
to another, why would anyone want tos spend more monye than needed to
achieve the same performance. Do you think they'd sell more VW's of they
performed exactly the way Porsche does? Do you tink if someone made a car
that performed exactly the way a Porsce does that they'd likely sell
plenty?


They do - the VW Touareg and Porsche Cayenne are the *same* car.


Until you look at the motors. That has more than a little to do with
"performance".

Sorry you know so little about cars.


Sorry you're unaware that the base models use the 3.2 V-6 VW petrol
engine, they share the 'stump-pulling' VW 5-litre V-10 turbo-diesel,
and the W-12 VW has the same power output (but with no turbo lag) as
the V-8 Cayenne Turbo S. Shame that you know so little about cars.

--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering
  #260   Report Post  
Stewart Pinkerton
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On 1 Sep 2005 13:41:55 -0700, wrote:

Your corection is accurate: I was writing from
memory- my memory for figures is just as poor as my arithmetics are
in general. My respect for medical research statisticians is
theoretical not, God forbids, hands on :
If the "golden ear" had really got 15 "hits" four times I
should have said that his score was a much better one namely 91% (my
calculator tells me) not 83% that I reported. Odd that you did not
include this in your account of my perfidy. Or do you make errors as
well sometimes?.

Here is Greenhill's table. If it is confusing blame Google. I tried
to arrange it cleanly but could not.
SUBJECTS: A B C D E F G H I J K
Test1: Monster vs. 24 g. wire,Pink noise
15 14 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15
2. Same but levels matched
9 13 7 10 na. 8 9 6 14 12 12
3. Monster vs. 16 gauge zipcord, Pink noise
13 7 10 7 11 12 9 9 11 12 7
4.. 16 ga vs. 24 ga., Pink noise
15 15 na. 14 15 na 15 14 15 15 15
5. Monster vs. 16ga., choral music
4 6 11 8 9 5 5 7 6 10 10
6. Monster vs. 24ga, choral music
14 7 15 10 8 10 6 10 11 12 10
______________________________________________
% of "hits" in the total of 6 tests 90 tries:


67. 50 40 33 40 40 33 33 50? 83 50



I am not prepared to lay my
life down for Greenhill's "golden ear"- once again the description is
Greenhill's not mine. Nor will I comment on your disagreement with his
statistics. The entire subject was thrashed out ad nauseam in the RAHE
2 years ago and I regret restarting it. While obviously you're not
bending over backwards to make allowances I have no quarrel with your
forum manners. I quoted Greenhill only as a bait to someone who
pontificated on the subject that he obviously knew little about. But
the topic brings out of the woodwork several creatures that I find
repulsive.
I note that you do not mention any ABX
component comparison studies that would meet your statistical
standards. Even the negative ones like Greenhill's or- dream on- just
one with a POSITIVE outcome.
Where is the research to validate the claims?
My comments are as follows:
1) Your comment that it is "no proof of
exceptional ability" is fair.The "golden ear's" performance may have
been sheer one time luck. ABXing I think fox the temporal lobes of the
brain. It does it to me. I find it funny that the ABXers are up in arms
when someone, just one man, is said to have done well when ABXing. They
should be cheering. Of course he inconsiderately did it comparing
cables and we know what cables are in the ABXers vocabulary.


No, he simply *did not do it* when comparing level-matched or similar
gauge, especially with your preferred music signal. Thank you for
confirming that you are a lying sack of ****.

2) All the panelists did well comparing
uneven diameter cables when pink noise was played to them. The scores
were much worse when music was used as a signal and became awful when
similar diameters were used. Oddly I'm interested in music not pink
noise.


Thank you for confirming that you are a lying sack of ****.

3) I understand that 16 Gauge vs. 24
gauge over 50" means 1,70db volume difference. Six out of eleven
panelists failed to hear this difference in 5 (out of fifteen) tries
or more. I have, with my elderly ears, no difficulty hearing 1db volume
difference between the two speakers when my stepped volume control is
moved without my knowledge- but of course I'm not ABXing.
Ludovic Mirabel


Thank you for confirming that you are a lying sack of ****.

--

Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering


  #261   Report Post  
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
...
" wrote in
message
nk.net
"Clyde Slick" wrote in message
...

" wrote in
message


BOB MOREIN, where is your condemnation of Arts' posts
and attacks on his IQ? This post of his is full of
errors. Aren't you going to tell him how low his IQ is.


It's where Bob's ethics are - where the sun shines not.

Its about content. Yours is woefully lacking


Bull****, his most recent posts have nothing to with
content, he's become Middius without the charisma, just
pointing out spelling errors.


When you're talking less charisma than Middius, you're really scraping the
bottom. But you're right.

If I had made the post you
made, he would have commented on the errors.


Yeah, but Art's posts pour healing oil on Bob's vendetta against me.

And speaking of lacking in content, what are most of your posts?


Let's not go there. Opps, we're there already.

Art is getting older and some people become more childish when they are
older. I remember Art' posts from years ago, and he used to be able to at
least suggest the appearance of content.

Maybe he Bob could claim that the posts are forged by Bwian again, to make
him look bad, or should I say worse than he already does.

It's the only possible way he might extricate himself from the deep doo-doo
he has put himself in. Either that, or he just likes doo-doo.


  #262   Report Post  
 
Posts: n/a
Default


Arny Krueger wrote:
"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in message

On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:17:18 -0400, "Clyde Slick"
wrote:


" wrote in
message
ink.net...


Then why would something like CD stoplight make the
RCL? It has no value at all, in fact the whole green
ink thing was the result of an April Fools Day prank.


Well, I tried it on a number of cd's, and it made most
of those a little worse sounding.


Bull**** - you always had an overly vivid imagination,
sad Sack.


Based on Sackman's lengthy and volumnous history of
over-the-edge postings, maybe he carried that philosoply
into his CD treatments.


What??? You're not supposed to cover the whole CD with geen ink???
;-)

  #263   Report Post  
 
Posts: n/a
Default


Lionel wrote:
dave weil a =E9crit :
On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 21:32:04 +0200, Lionel
wrote:


dave weil a =E9crit :

On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 17:28:14 +0000 (UTC), Stewart Pinkerton
wrote:



On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:18:57 -0400, "Clyde Slick"
wrote:



" wrote in message
arthlink.net...

When people flat out lie about the perfomance improvements that a p=

eice of
equipment, it's my feeling that such information shoud be challenge=

d=2E If
manufacturers want to chare high prices for gear they ought to expe=

ct
challenges. Aside from liking the way one peice of gear looks as =

opposed
to another, why would anyone want tos spend more monye than needed =

to
achieve the same performance. Do you think they'd sell more VW's o=

f they
performed exactly the way Porsche does? Do you tink if someone mad=

e a car
that performed exactly the way a Porsce does that they'd likely sell
plenty?

They do - the VW Touareg and Porsche Cayenne are the *same* car.


Until you look at the motors. That has more than a little to do with
"performance".

Sorry you know so little about cars.

LOL I bet that *you* can make the difference between :

Porsche Cayenne : Cayenne Turbo 450 ch - 620 Nm.
0 to 100 km/H : 5,6 secondes

VW Touareg W12 : 450 ch - 600 Nm
0 to 100 km/H : 5,9 secondes

BTW 99% of the drivers would not make any
difference between the V10 TDI (313ch) and the W12, so...

I'm sorry *you* know so little about cars, Dave.



When you learn the meaning of the English word "exactly", please get
back to me.


Oh, oh Dave is vexed.


Of course he is, the little back-and-forth-and-back-and-forth session
he tried to start with Stewart just blew up in his face. I think he was
not aware of the availability of the W12 engine in the Touareg.


My point was about performance :
"That has more than a little to do with "performance".

When you learn to read, please get back too me. ;-)


Be nice to dave, Lionel, he's very busy picking the egg off his face.
:-D

  #264   Report Post  
 
Posts: n/a
Default


wrote in message
oups.com...
Your corection is accurate: I was writing from
memory- my memory for figures is just as poor as my arithmetics are
in general. My respect for medical research statisticians is
theoretical not, God forbids, hands on :
If the "golden ear" had really got 15 "hits" four times I
should have said that his score was a much better one namely 91% (my
calculator tells me) not 83% that I reported. Odd that you did not
include this in your account of my perfidy. Or do you make errors as
well sometimes?.

Here is Greenhill's table. If it is confusing blame Google. I tried
to arrange it cleanly but could not.
SUBJECTS: A B C D E F G H I J K
Test1: Monster vs. 24 g. wire,Pink noise
15 14 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15 15
2. Same but levels matched
9 13 7 10 na. 8 9 6 14 12 12
3. Monster vs. 16 gauge zipcord, Pink noise
13 7 10 7 11 12 9 9 11 12 7
4.. 16 ga vs. 24 ga., Pink noise
15 15 na. 14 15 na 15 14 15 15 15
5. Monster vs. 16ga., choral music
4 6 11 8 9 5 5 7 6 10 10
6. Monster vs. 24ga, choral music
14 7 15 10 8 10 6 10 11 12 10
______________________________________________
% of "hits" in the total of 6 tests 90 tries:


67. 50 40 33 40 40 33 33 50? 83 50



I am not prepared to lay my
life down for Greenhill's "golden ear"- once again the description is
Greenhill's not mine. Nor will I comment on your disagreement with his
statistics. The entire subject was thrashed out ad nauseam in the RAHE
2 years ago and I regret restarting it. While obviously you're not
bending over backwards to make allowances I have no quarrel with your
forum manners. I quoted Greenhill only as a bait to someone who
pontificated on the subject that he obviously knew little about. But
the topic brings out of the woodwork several creatures that I find
repulsive.

The biggest of which is your own lying self. You bring up an article tgat
essentially provesthe case for wire being wire. Nothing more than random
chance for equal diameter wire, as expected.

I note that you do not mention any ABX
component comparison studies that would meet your statistical
standards. Even the negative ones like Greenhill's or- dream on- just
one with a POSITIVE outcome.
Where is the research to validate the claims?
My comments are as follows:
1) Your comment that it is "no proof of
exceptional ability" is fair.The "golden ear's" performance may have
been sheer one time luck. ABXing I think fox the temporal lobes of the
brain. It does it to me. I find it funny that the ABXers are up in arms
when someone, just one man, is said to have done well when ABXing. They
should be cheering.


For what? The physics of wire don't allow for it to be discerned when
compared properly.

Of course he inconsiderately did it comparing
cables and we know what cables are in the ABXers vocabulary.


They are wire, and wire has proerties that are well known, thus when
comparing wire of equal gauge, nobody will ever tell one form another.

2) All the panelists did well comparing
uneven diameter cables when pink noise was played to them. The scores
were much worse when music was used as a signal and became awful when
similar diameters were used.


As has been said repeatedly, pink noise is better than music for telling
differences.

Oddly I'm interested in music not pink
noise.


Nor truth.

3) I understand that 16 Gauge vs. 24
gauge over 50" means 1,70db volume difference. Six out of eleven
panelists failed to hear this difference in 5 (out of fifteen) tries
or more. I have, with my elderly ears, no difficulty hearing 1db volume
difference between the two speakers when my stepped volume control is
moved without my knowledge- but of course I'm not ABXing.
Ludovic Mirabel

Of course not, you prefer to pretend that difference exists wher it does
not.


  #265   Report Post  
 
Posts: n/a
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To John Corbett: (See message from him on Sept. 1. Find text below)
Second thoughts:
Largely through my fault this debate is completely off the
rails. It should not be about the "golden ear".
If he indeed performed miracles getting 83% accuracy then
there are differences between the wires waiting to be "tested.
But three testees ("expert audiophiles all according to
Greenhill) had 33% accuracy score. To them wires are totally
indistiguishable- their results are worse than random.
Let's accept all the criticsms of these 83% results:
"nonrepeatable fluke" etc. Perhaps the "golden ear would go down to 33%
next time around.
Of what use to an ordinary choice- seeking audiophile is a
"test" like that?
And if you consider that in Sean Olive's careful
loudspeaker lab testing ( S. Olive "Differences in performance...."
JAES, vol 51, No 8, 2003, 806- 826) the divergencies in performance
were nearly just as wide- then it is not only wires that are
indistinguishable to many while DBTiing. (Olive felt full ABX was
unsuitable. Ask him why)
Again and again : a one grand "test" for the varying
abilities of millions of individuals to listen and discern is a
pipedream of simplistic minds. So simple that they don't even know when
they are burying their own darling.
Ludovic Mirabel
P.S. As recent correspondence (not yours) shows my comment about
"repulsive creatures crawling out of the woodwork" was an
understatement.
_______________________

wrote:
I did not invent Greenhill's "Golden Ear" or Greenhill's statistics. I
*quoted* from that impeccably objectivist writer who moderated and
reported the Stereo Review cable test.



Ludovic's *quoted* results are pure fabrications. See below.


You are also taking him for a village moron and insulting his statistics'
protocol which for an objectivist, with an axe to grind, was quite scrupulous
(read it!!!). I suspect that he forgot more statistics than you had ever
known. I learnt mine as an employee of the Med. Research Ccil. of U.K. where
double blind tests were *first ever* used.



If Ludovic understood statistical science, he would recognize that
Greenhill's Stereo Review article is not an example of good statistical

work. I used to wonder if Greenhill intended that article as a
hoax---it's that bad--- but now I am resigned to the idea that he was
serious.


I must acknowledge that I admire your temerity in- how shall I put it?-
shooting your mouth off without first looking up the source (I gave
clear reference to it)



See below---what more can I say?.


Greenhill's "Golden Ear" did not "come at 81% one time" Mr,
Scott W. There were six different cable comparison tests consisting of
15 trials each. The "Golden Ear" got 15 out of 15 in four of them,
12 in one, and 10 in one. Hence 83%-get it?



Actually the so-called "Golden Ear" got 15 of 15 in _two_ (not four)
sets
of trials; he got 12 in three sets, and 10 in one.

So much for Ludovic's high standards for accurate reporting.


Even those two perfect scores are not so impressive.


One of the two perfect scores for Listener J (the alleged "Golden Ear")

was on the first test (Monster vs 24 awg, pink noise, levels
unmatched).
Ten of the eleven listeners got 15 of 15 on that, and the other
listener
got 14 of 15; that was an overall rate of 164/165 (more than 99%).


The other perfect score for Listener J was a similar test (16 awg vs 24

awg, pink noise, levels unmatched). Greenhill gave scores for only
nine
listeners (who all got 14 or 15) for an overall rate exceeding 98%.


High scores on such easy tests are not necessarily evidence of
exceptional
ability. By adding those scores to results from other tests Greenhill
inflated the combined score, whether or not it even it made sense to
combine the scores in the first place. That's rather weak support for
"Golden Ear" status.


Reply



  #266   Report Post  
Annika1980
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I got my own cable theory: WIRE = WIRE !!!

  #268   Report Post  
 
Posts: n/a
Default

NYOB says: (Sept 1)
"The biggest of which is your own lying self. You bring up
an article tgat
essentially provesthe case for wire being wire. Nothing more than
random
chance for equal diameter wire, as expected.
I note that you do not mention any ABX "

Temper... temper Mr. NYOB. You don't have to imitate our
littler RAO Goebbelses. Why don't you check Greenhill's article for
yourself rather than expect me to spoonfeed you? But I will this time-
yes it was an ABX test.
Dear NYOB. "Wire is wire". So be it.
But the crux is not the object of the "test" but the test itself.
I don't think you're capable of lying convincingly so I won't
reciprocate. I think you truly believe in your "test". But when you
tell me that *I'm* a believer I must point out that your semantics
are out of whack. You preach a "test". I'm asking for your
evidence. Call me a heretic, a disbeliever, a sceptic- your choice. But
I'm not a believer. You are.
But enough of word games. I'd rather not have this topic
sidetracked into a pointless, unprovable argument about "Wire this,
wire that". It is about the "test" that you say "proves' how
right you are when you can not hear very much.

Are the loudspeakers, cartridges, amps, preamps, cdplayers
and Dacs same as the wires? Or have you finally found a test report
(Journak, author(s_. vol., year, Nr,. Page) where most members of an
ABX panel could tell one comparable component from another?
Naturally I'd expect that you would apply your exacting
statistical criteria (better than 83% hits?) to such a report and not
gossip about "industry" or the BBC doing this or that. Judging by
your fighting choice of "arguments" (see above) I'd hate feeling
responsible for some unpleasantness befalling you from rising blood
pressure while trying to devise new dodges so I'll make this one a
final (5th?) invitation.
In the future till you respond I'll just reprint what I
said to you on August 30th:
"But "naturally" he is unable to quote "one single bias controlled'
(his cryptonim for ABX/DBT) comparison between anything and anything
else in audio. He was challenged twice for a reference to a published
report (Author(s), title , year, Nr.,page). of an ABX testing, where
the majority recognised the difference.. And he clammed up twice (only
to reemerge after a suitable interval.
Mr. McKelvy where else outside the long-suffering usenet did your
"test" work? "
On Aug. 31 we had another exchange:
"Mr McKelvy, do you realize how ridiculous you sound when YOU
pompously
"point (me) in the right direction?"
How about cutting out the chit- chatting and "pointing out" some
references to the ABX helping to recognise differences between
anything and anything else in audio. If I "hair-split and deny", never
mind me- the world is waiting with bated breath. Your grateful readers
will be able to tell the grain from the jaw jaw chaff."
By now the clam up count is up to three.
Ludovic Mirabel

  #269   Report Post  
dave weil
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 20:48:56 +0000 (UTC), Stewart Pinkerton
wrote:

On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 13:16:22 -0500, dave weil
wrote:

On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 17:28:14 +0000 (UTC), Stewart Pinkerton
wrote:

On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:18:57 -0400, "Clyde Slick"
wrote:

" wrote in message
rthlink.net...

When people flat out lie about the perfomance improvements that a peice of
equipment, it's my feeling that such information shoud be challenged. If
manufacturers want to chare high prices for gear they ought to expect
challenges. Aside from liking the way one peice of gear looks as opposed
to another, why would anyone want tos spend more monye than needed to
achieve the same performance. Do you think they'd sell more VW's of they
performed exactly the way Porsche does? Do you tink if someone made a car
that performed exactly the way a Porsce does that they'd likely sell
plenty?

They do - the VW Touareg and Porsche Cayenne are the *same* car.


Until you look at the motors. That has more than a little to do with
"performance".

Sorry you know so little about cars.


Sorry you're unaware that the base models use the 3.2 V-6 VW petrol
engine,


Except that the Porsche gets 25 more HP out of the same motor. Sorry
you don't know more about what you're talking about.

they share the 'stump-pulling' VW 5-litre V-10 turbo-diesel,


Ooops, nope. The Cayenne doesn't offer the diesel.

and the W-12 VW has the same power output (but with no turbo lag) as
the V-8 Cayenne Turbo S.


There is no such model as a Cayenne Turbo S. The S is a V-8, the
turbo-equipped model is called Turbo. Besides, the W12 ISN'T AVAILABLE
on the Touareg, so it's irrelevant. And since it's not a
Pinkerton-approved "cutting-edge motor", who cares, right?

Shame that you know so little about cars.


So you say. However, you've gotten just about everything wrong in this
post.
  #270   Report Post  
paul packer
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:55:04 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote:


The legal definition of kiddie porn is quite exact. A person
changes from an illegal subject to a legal subject in one
day.


Actually in 2 seconds, just around midnight.


  #271   Report Post  
paul packer
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 16:33:13 GMT, "
wrote:


"paul packer" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 06:40:56 GMT, "
wrote:


Sure about that? You mean if you just spent 10,000 on an amp and a
mag told you it was crap, and backed that conclusion up with figures,
and insisted that all the reviewers on the mag were in agreement that
it was total feces and sounded nothing like music...you mean that
wouldn't have the slightest effect on your post-purchase pleasure?

Thankfully, we don't have to worry about such an event becuase we already
know that the overwhelming majority of audio equipment sounds alike.


Well, you do, anyway. My point was that it's impossible not to be
influenced by others.


Sure it is, especially if you know they are wrong.

There's a saying: "Any conviction gains
infinitely the moment another begins to believe in it."


Those who beleive that there are gigantic differences in the sound of audio
equipment, probably, those who know what the blind comparsions have shown,
not so much.

You could also
say, "Every conviction is subject to doubt the moment someone
expresses a contrary opinion." George claims a negative review
wouldn't affect his listening pleasure. I don't believe it, but I'd
like to hear other input.

It wouldn't affect me either, and I suspect it's for the same reason. I
stopped caring about audio as a status symbol 25 years ago, when I learned
that most of what was being said about sonic differences was bull****.


Well, I'd repeat what I've said elsewhere about the inability to have
a doubt being a sure sign of madness. It's worrying to see people
making statements like: "Sure it is, especially if you know they're
wrong".

Try to be a little uncertain occasionally. It's good for the ego.
  #272   Report Post  
paul packer
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 10:53:05 -0400, "Arny Krueger"
wrote:
Surely if you're looking for
charlatans in the audio industry this where most of them
hang out.


I don't know if that is a slam dunk.


Explanation?


I don't think that it is necessarily true that people
selling $100, $200, $300 mini-systems are charlatans.


Charlatans is probably the wrong word. Let's be kind and call them
"marketers addicted to hyperbole". Not that there's anything strange
about that, of course.

Personally I don't believe that expensive
cables make much if any difference,

Notice the hedge, apparently faith springs eternal.


I fear this says something important about you, Arnie.
Most people like to leave room for a doubt. Remember what
I said (or rather, Mr. Ustinov said) about the inability
to have a doubt?


Believe it or not Paul, you may not always find the best
information about technology in the popular media.


I claimed otherwise?

Its not about an inability to have a doubt about
*everything*, its about knowing what can and cannot be done.


Fair enough. However, I still detect too little doubt in most of your
statements about audio.

What galls me
about the marketing of micros, midis & minis is that it
effectively syphons off all the potential customers for
real hi-fi


People who buy this stuff are looking for a packaged
solution. Where they fade out, HTIB systems pick up.


They're looking for a packaged solution because they've
been convinced the package will supply their need. This
is called marketing.


It may also be a reasonble offering.


It may well suit their needs. I had a need for such a system in the
loungeroom. Doesn't alter the fact that their marketing excludes the
possibility that there may be something better, that sound
reproduction can reach greater heights. It's a pity that the audio
manufacturing world is divided more or less into two camps--the
mainstream Sony/Panasonic/Sanyo/Teac etc camp churning out svelt
little mini/micro systems in only slightly different price ranges, and
the specialist hi-fi manufacturers. What I mean is, if say Sony also
marketed high grade hi-fi, they would be pitching their mini/micro
systems on a "first step" basis hoping to keep the same customer
through many upgrades, and higher-end hi-fi would probably be
flourishing. As it is, mini/micro systems are the alpha and omega;
buyers go from a mini/micro to another mini/micro with more of the
latest gadgets without ever suspecting the possibility of better sound
even from something the same size. I guess you could call this dead
end marketing, but it's only a dead end for the hi-fi specialists.
Sony/panasonic et al continue to flourish.

HT is swallowing hi-fi whole.


Couldn't happen to a nicer bunch of guys, but you're wrong.

HT + portable A/V + HTPC are swallowing hi-fi.


Don't you mean I'm one third right?

Few people care to have two
systems, one for HT and one for audio. Ergo, the HT has
to do for both. And in the minds of most punters, why
should it not?


I'm not sure they are punters.

You're way behind, Paul. Many people don't have any serious
HT at all. Instead, they put their time and money into
portable A/V. Some of the most serious HT advocates I know
are actually doing HTPC.


I don't understand this paragraph at all. In OZ there's a HT stampede.
Has been for years, shows no sign of abating. HT rules.

I wonder how many innocents have
listened to their first mini system plastered with the
word "Hi-Fi" and thought, "Well if that's hi-fi it's
waaaay overrated. I thought it was s'posed to sound like
a real band."


Probably not many at all. Who would be that naive?


Get into the real world, Arnie.


I suspect that the US is a little more mainstream than
Aussie-land.


Why? Isn't Oz a province of the good old US of A? Even yank tourists
can't believe how at home they feel.

As I said before, you've been slaving over that hot test
bench too long.


The fact is Paul, you simply don't know me. I don't even
have a audio-related test bench right now due to home
(re)construction.


(snip quite interesting personal tid-bits)

Too literal, Arnie. The term "test bench" is merely a metaphor for
getting involved in your current interests to the exclusion of the
wider world. Tunnel vision, in other words.

  #273   Report Post  
paul packer
 
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Default

On 1 Sep 2005 08:06:35 -0700, George Middius
wrote:



paul packer said to La Salope:

You are kindly credulous. I appreciate.


"Kindly credulous"? Interesting use of English.


Lewis Carroll may have anticipated Lionella's assaults on the language. But at
the last minute, his editor persuaded him to call the beast Jabberwocky instead
of Gibberwocky.


You do know of course that one of the underlying motives of the
French/English wars was the spread of language. Both sides realized
that ultimately language dictated influence, that if a colony or
province spoke your language, its allegiance would almost certainly be
to you. The French lost those wars, the evidence being that the
dominant world language today is English, but that doesn't mean
they've taken the loss in good part. Personally I believe that much of
the current obstructionist activity of the French as a nation arises
from their resentment that English is now either the first or second
language of most of the world's youth--in other words, they're sore
losers. However, they still have RAO in which to make a last stand. By
posting in gibberish English, it's possible they hope to convince us
that English is not after all a fit means of communication, the
inference being that French might be better. Consequently I would
urge all RAO posters and lurkers to resist this mean-spirited attempt
at cultural sabotage and demand a full translation of any gibberish
they encounter. This is simple first line defence of our most precious
possession-our primary means of communication. English must survive,
and RAO is where the battle starts. :-)

  #274   Report Post  
Mr.T
 
Posts: n/a
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"paul packer" wrote in message
...
Actually in 2 seconds, just around midnight.


Why 2 seconds? Why not 1 second, or even 1 nano second?

MrT.


  #275   Report Post  
paul packer
 
Posts: n/a
Default

On Fri, 2 Sep 2005 18:27:31 +1000, "Mr.T" MrT@home wrote:


"paul packer" wrote in message
...
Actually in 2 seconds, just around midnight.


Why 2 seconds? Why not 1 second, or even 1 nano second?


I wasn't going to split hairs. But hey, why not?


  #276   Report Post  
Lionel
 
Posts: n/a
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dave weil a écrit :
On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 22:06:14 +0200, Lionel
wrote:


Porsche Cayenne : Cayenne Turbo 450 ch - 620 Nm.
0 to 100 km/H : 5,6 secondes

VW Touareg W12 : 450 ch - 600 Nm
0 to 100 km/H : 5,9 secondes

BTW 99% of the drivers would not make any
difference between the V10 TDI (313ch) and the W12, so...

I'm sorry *you* know so little about cars, Dave.


When you learn the meaning of the English word "exactly", please get
back to me.


Oh, oh Dave is vexed.

My point was about performance :
"That has more than a little to do with "performance".

When you learn to read, please get back too me. ;-)



Who cares WHAT your point was about?


Mr Pinkerton perhaps. ;-)

But since you asked, .3 of a
second IS a difference.


LOL !

Whether or not YOU think that a certain
percentage of drivers might or might not notice is stupid. That
difference could mean the difference between life and death.


You cannot imagine how *ridiculous* you are.


Now, quit interferring


Lesson one for you, small man, if you don't like
interferences don't post on a public NG.

before I DO get "vexed".


Oh, I'm scary. :-)

  #277   Report Post  
Lionel
 
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a écrit :
Lionel wrote:

dave weil a écrit :

On Thu, 01 Sep 2005 21:32:04 +0200, Lionel
wrote:



dave weil a écrit :


On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 17:28:14 +0000 (UTC), Stewart Pinkerton
wrote:




On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:18:57 -0400, "Clyde Slick"
wrote:




" wrote in message
.earthlink.net...

When people flat out lie about the perfomance improvements that a peice of
equipment, it's my feeling that such information shoud be challenged. If
manufacturers want to chare high prices for gear they ought to expect
challenges. Aside from liking the way one peice of gear looks as opposed
to another, why would anyone want tos spend more monye than needed to
achieve the same performance. Do you think they'd sell more VW's of they
performed exactly the way Porsche does? Do you tink if someone made a car
that performed exactly the way a Porsce does that they'd likely sell
plenty?

They do - the VW Touareg and Porsche Cayenne are the *same* car.


Until you look at the motors. That has more than a little to do with
"performance".

Sorry you know so little about cars.

LOL I bet that *you* can make the difference between :

Porsche Cayenne : Cayenne Turbo 450 ch - 620 Nm.
0 to 100 km/H : 5,6 secondes

VW Touareg W12 : 450 ch - 600 Nm
0 to 100 km/H : 5,9 secondes

BTW 99% of the drivers would not make any
difference between the V10 TDI (313ch) and the W12, so...

I'm sorry *you* know so little about cars, Dave.


When you learn the meaning of the English word "exactly", please get
back to me.


Oh, oh Dave is vexed.



Of course he is, the little back-and-forth-and-back-and-forth session
he tried to start with Stewart just blew up in his face. I think he was
not aware of the availability of the W12 engine in the Touareg.


I really like to peeve him using his prefered tactic. It's
very easy 'cause it's always the same.

The only "danger" or trap with Dave Weil is to believe that
he is really interested in the discussion. Except this
apparent sincerity, honesty that he mimes correctly, he is
totaly inoffensive.



My point was about performance :
"That has more than a little to do with "performance".

When you learn to read, please get back too me. ;-)



Be nice to dave, Lionel, he's very busy picking the egg off his face.
:-D


Let me add one or two rotten tomatoes and we will have some
"oeufs brouillés". :-D
  #278   Report Post  
Arny Krueger
 
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wrote in message
oups.com
Arny Krueger wrote:
"Stewart Pinkerton" wrote in
message
On Thu, 1 Sep 2005 11:17:18 -0400, "Clyde Slick"
wrote:


" wrote in
message
ink.net...

Then why would something like CD stoplight make the
RCL? It has no value at all, in fact the whole green
ink thing was the result of an April Fools Day prank.


Well, I tried it on a number of cd's, and it made most
of those a little worse sounding.

Bull**** - you always had an overly vivid imagination,
sad Sack.


Based on Sackman's lengthy and volumnous history of
over-the-edge postings, maybe he carried that philosoply
into his CD treatments.


What??? You're not supposed to cover the whole CD with
green ink??? ;-)


That would explain his claimed results perfectly. It would
something that a person of his level of technical competence
might do.

Psst! Don't tell Art! ;-)


  #279   Report Post  
Arny Krueger
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"paul packer" wrote in message



Well, I'd repeat what I've said elsewhere about the
inability to have a doubt being a sure sign of madness.


Thus showing that you can't distinguish between having no
doubt about certain isolated facts, and having no doubt
about just about anything.

It's worrying to see people making statements like: "Sure
it is, especially if you know they're wrong".


When one is dealing with audiophools, its almost like you
know they are wrong before they start speaking. If they get
something right, its like a hallowed day.

Try to be a little uncertain occasionally. It's good for
the ego.


In real life I'm known as a skeptic and one who hangs with
skeptics. The whole ABX crew go almost so far as to try to
one-up each other when it comes to skepticism. The attack on
golden-eared audio was founded in skepticism and discussions
of epistemology.

BTW Paul, just in case you don't see the connection, being
a skeptic means having doubt about *everything*.
;-)


  #280   Report Post  
Lionel
 
Posts: n/a
Default

paul packer a écrit :
On 1 Sep 2005 08:06:35 -0700, George Middius
wrote:



paul packer said to La Salope:


You are kindly credulous. I appreciate.


"Kindly credulous"? Interesting use of English.


Lewis Carroll may have anticipated Lionella's assaults on the language. But at
the last minute, his editor persuaded him to call the beast Jabberwocky instead
of Gibberwocky.



You do know of course that one of the underlying motives of the
French/English wars was the spread of language. Both sides realized
that ultimately language dictated influence, that if a colony or
province spoke your language, its allegiance would almost certainly be
to you. The French lost those wars, the evidence being that the
dominant world language today is English, but that doesn't mean
they've taken the loss in good part. Personally I believe that much of
the current obstructionist activity of the French as a nation arises
from their resentment that English is now either the first or second
language of most of the world's youth--in other words, they're sore
losers. However, they still have RAO in which to make a last stand. By
posting in gibberish English, it's possible they hope to convince us
that English is not after all a fit means of communication, the
inference being that French might be better. Consequently I would
urge all RAO posters and lurkers to resist this mean-spirited attempt
at cultural sabotage and demand a full translation of any gibberish
they encounter. This is simple first line defence of our most precious
possession-our primary means of communication. English must survive,
and RAO is where the battle starts. :-)


English doesn't exist anymore, it already succumbs to its
fast internationalization...
This explains why Brits are marginalized in Europe now. ;-)
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