Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#11
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Audio Empire" wrote in message
On Thu, 31 Mar 2011 12:41:08 -0700, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message This type of person is often the type who participate in DBTs as well, rank laymen. Simply not true. The DBTs I've been involved with involved experienced audiophiles, some youngsters, some who went back to the days of tubes. So, you feel that you can speak for all DBTs? That's not what I wrote. I feel no need to respond to made-up statements. People like him and college students who were weened on MP3s and ear-buds are the average "listener". Here we go again, another set of self-serving audiophile myths. Where are the peer-reviewed paper that shows that people who listen to MP3 and personal listening devices necessarily have any deficiencies when it comes to reliably detecting audible differences? They can listen to low-data rate MP3s They could. Heck, I listen to low bitrate files frequently because that is how most spoken word recordings are distributed. It doesn't sound lifelike or even good, but the goal is communicating information, not tickling the inner ear. Fact is that many audible differences are easier to detect with earphones and/or headphones. And it seems that a large majority of the younger generations DON'T CARE about these "differences" AT ALL or they wouldn't be listening to really low-bit rate MP3s and would insist in ripping their music at higher bit rates. Straw man argument because it has already been generally agreed upon that the vast majority of music listeners aren't audiophiles and never will be. OTOH, there is a rapidly emerging market for music encoded in high-bitrate compressed files, uncompressed and lossless-compressed files, and even music files with 24 bit data words and sample rates up to 192KHz. There has been a major explosion in sales of high priced and in some cases high quality earphones and headphones. Traditional vendors like Sennheiser and Etymotics are bringing out new extremely expensive high performance headphones and earphones. Non-traditional vendors are doing similar things in even greater volumes. If not for the young, mobile music listener, then who? I have a number of friends with teenaged and college aged kids with iPod-like devices. They listen to them constantly. When I ask them what bit-rate they use, the answer is always the same: "The one that allows me to put the most songs in the available space". I.E. quantity instead of quality. These are choices that they get to make. This is also just the mass market, not the already large and rapidly emerging market for high quality mobile listening experiences. Remember that most of our parents were happy listening to AM radios when they were young, and as a rule they had no viable alternatives until the 1950s. On balance the low and rapidly falling prices for flash memory make crushing music in order to store huge amounts of it in portable devices more nonsensical than ever. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
FS: Vintage Audio Tubes and other Vintage Electronic Parts | Vacuum Tubes | |||
FS: Vintage Audio Tubes and other Vintage Electronic Parts | Vacuum Tubes | |||
FS: Vintage Audio Tubes and other Vintage Electronic Parts | Vacuum Tubes | |||
FS: Vintage Audio Tubes and other Vintage Electronic Parts | Vacuum Tubes | |||
Semi OT - vintage amplifier for vintage system? | Vacuum Tubes |