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"c. leeds" writes:
Chung wrote: Yes, digital audio did not take over immediately. One reason is that the cost of the CD player was very high in the first year, or maybe two years. Back then you had to really care about sound to invest in a CD player and the CD's. You must be joking, right? I agree with him, and I am not joking. I made the decision to invest in the then-expensive CD player and CD replacements precisely because I cared about the sound. And I think he has a valid point: the "early adopters" have to see something signficantly better in a technology in order to shell out the extra cash to get in on the ground floor. At the time I was an electrical engineer developing part of a $40M satellite tracking system for one of those government agencies you don't talk about in the clear, the point being I was seeped in technology (and still am) and knew my way around the digital world. -- % Randy Yates % "With time with what you've learned, %% Fuquay-Varina, NC % they'll kiss the ground you walk %%% 919-577-9882 % upon." %%%% % '21st Century Man', *Time*, ELO http://home.earthlink.net/~yatescr |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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Randy Yates wrote:
"c. leeds" writes: Chung wrote: Yes, digital audio did not take over immediately. One reason is that the cost of the CD player was very high in the first year, or maybe two years. Back then you had to really care about sound to invest in a CD player and the CD's. You must be joking, right? I agree with him, and I am not joking. I made the decision to invest in the then-expensive CD player and CD replacements precisely because I cared about the sound. And I think he has a valid point: the "early adopters" have to see something signficantly better in a technology in order to shell out the extra cash to get in on the ground floor. At the time I was an electrical engineer developing part of a $40M satellite tracking system for one of those government agencies you don't talk about in the clear, the point being I was seeped in technology (and still am) and knew my way around the digital world. I worked at HP during the early 1980's. The lab engineers I worked with were unanimously impressed with the sound quality of CD's. In fact, everyone in our lab who had any interest in sound had switched over to CD very early, so I guess engineers tend to be early adopters when they are convinced of the technical superiority of the new technologies. The couple of engineers who were also expert audio designers I knew at the time (who would become famous later in high-end audio) were already exclusively using digital technology (PCM to beta) to record live concerts. |
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