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#1
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If you check the records of Usenet groups, you will see that it has long
been known, based on ABX and other blind listening tests, that so-called hi-rez audio formats such as HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage. So what is the box score for the market sucess of these formats? Well, HDCD is now reduced to being a subfeature of the Windows Media Player, DTS is no longer in the news, and DVD-A and SACD are dying on the vine sales-wise. For recent information about the latter two formats, check the RIAA sales statistics posted at http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf . What they show is that same-half-year sales of SACD recordings has dropped by more than half from 2003 to 2004. DVD-A sales increases failed to take up the slack. Total first-half 2004 sales of recordings in both formats were about 600,000 units. which is about 0.2% of the sales of CD-Audio recordings. Even cassette and vinyl which are even more lower-rez than CD-Audio vastly outsold the two latest so-called Hi-rez formats! While the so-called hi-rez formats were struggling to sell mere recordings at an annualized rate of 1.2 million units, lower-rez formats such as MP3 and AAC were responsible for sales of millions and millions of players. Sales of low-rez format recordings over the web are also booming. There seems to be a lesson here, being that audio technology that can't prove itself in ABX and other DBT listening tests, can resaonably be expected to do poorly in the marketplace. |
#2
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in
: If you check the records of Usenet groups, you will see that it has long been known, based on ABX and other blind listening tests, that so-called hi-rez audio formats such as HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage. So what is the box score for the market sucess of these formats? Well, HDCD is now reduced to being a subfeature of the Windows Media Player, DTS is no longer in the news, and DVD-A and SACD are dying on the vine sales-wise. For recent information about the latter two formats, check the RIAA sales statistics posted at http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf . What they show is that same-half-year sales of SACD recordings has dropped by more than half from 2003 to 2004. DVD-A sales increases failed to take up the slack. Total first-half 2004 sales of recordings in both formats were about 600,000 units. which is about 0.2% of the sales of CD-Audio recordings. Even cassette and vinyl which are even more lower-rez than CD-Audio vastly outsold the two latest so-called Hi-rez formats! While the so-called hi-rez formats were struggling to sell mere recordings at an annualized rate of 1.2 million units, lower-rez formats such as MP3 and AAC were responsible for sales of millions and millions of players. Sales of low-rez format recordings over the web are also booming. There seems to be a lesson here, being that audio technology that can't prove itself in ABX and other DBT listening tests, can resaonably be expected to do poorly in the marketplace. Arny, You might want to look at the numbers again. I prefer to look at number of units sold - not dollar amounts. It tells a more accurate story and reveals additional information when compared to dollars. DVD-A units went up over 100% DVD Video unit went up by over 100% CD units went up by over 10% Vinyl went down 8.4% SACD went down by over 54% Cassette went down over 68% CD singles went down over 55% While the clear loser in the DVD-A vs SACD war was SACD, SACD vs. cassette shows analog tape the loser which is no surprise to me. I think your assertion that "HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage." should be tempered with the following article. http://www.stereophile.com/digitalso...fth/index.html Sony/Philips may need to enforce some sort of quality control over SACD. If SACD is dying so horribly, why did McIntosh introduce their first universal (read SACD too) player this year? It wasn't because they felt it would be a waste of time and money. Putting all that aside, the interesting fact is that while the number of DVD units went up 100%, the total dollars went up a bit over 50%. That means that retails prices have dropped significantly. It is apparant that DVD certainly is becoming more attractive in terms of price. Make it cheap and they will buy. Speaking of prices, have you compared the prices of DVD, DVD-A, SACD, and CD lately? It would appear that Sony/Philips actually wants to kill off the medium. Until Sony/Phillips actually makes it attractive to produce hybrid CD/SACD, the format will likely fade away. As it is right now, the retails prices are about $1.00 more for the hybrid over a plain CD. Who will be the first to put a multichannel system in a car? More importantly, will it be a universal player that plays all formats? http://www.soundandvisionmag.com/art...article_id=477 &pa ge_number=2 says "...at January’s Consumer Electronics Show, three companies — Eclipse, Kenwood, and Pioneer — announced DVD-A-ready heads ....." "Sony tells me there are no current plans to introduce a car-specific SACD player. The company says it will someday, but there’s no official timetable yet." This begs the question why? What is Sony/Philips doing? Why wait? Why not push for SACD/DVD-A/etc in the car? It does make someone wonder what the hell is going on at Sony and company. Compare the numbers on the link you gave to the numbers at http://www.riaa.com/news/marketingda...d_yr_chart.pdf which is the 2002-2003 mid year stats. SACD isn't there at all. What does that mean? It means that 2003 was the first year that SACD was included. My assesment? It is a bit early to tell. It all depends on what Sony/Phillips does. SACD the next BetaMax? Could be. Maybe it will become ubiquitous like the CD. Maybe it will all become a moot point if the new Blu-Ray format takes off. Here is another tidbit for those TV addicts. You may be watching more commercials than you are now, TIVO or not. "... Congress is getting ready to vote on the omnibus Intellectual Property Protection Bill which has provisions tacked on that, if passed, could prevent users from skipping commercials on DVDs and recorded broadcasts [read TiVO], according to Public Knowledge, a public-interest advocacy group." http://www.tvtechnology.com/dailynews/one.php?id=2508 r -- Proposed encyclopedia entry: Professional Liar: see Politician |
#3
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"R" wrote in message
. 1 "Arny Krueger" wrote in : If you check the records of Usenet groups, you will see that it has long been known, based on ABX and other blind listening tests, that so-called hi-rez audio formats such as HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage. So what is the box score for the market sucess of these formats? Well, HDCD is now reduced to being a subfeature of the Windows Media Player, DTS is no longer in the news, and DVD-A and SACD are dying on the vine sales-wise. For recent information about the latter two formats, check the RIAA sales statistics posted at http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf . What they show is that same-half-year sales of SACD recordings has dropped by more than half from 2003 to 2004. DVD-A sales increases failed to take up the slack. Total first-half 2004 sales of recordings in both formats were about 600,000 units. which is about 0.2% of the sales of CD-Audio recordings. Even cassette and vinyl which are even more lower-rez than CD-Audio vastly outsold the two latest so-called Hi-rez formats! While the so-called hi-rez formats were struggling to sell mere recordings at an annualized rate of 1.2 million units, lower-rez formats such as MP3 and AAC were responsible for sales of millions and millions of players. Sales of low-rez format recordings over the web are also booming. There seems to be a lesson here, being that audio technology that can't prove itself in ABX and other DBT listening tests, can resaonably be expected to do poorly in the marketplace. Arny, You might want to look at the numbers again. I prefer to look at number of units sold - not dollar amounts. It tells a more accurate story and reveals additional information when compared to dollars. DVD-A units went up over 100% DVD Video unit went up by over 100% CD units went up by over 10% Vinyl went down 8.4% SACD went down by over 54% Cassette went down over 68% CD singles went down over 55% While the clear loser in the DVD-A vs SACD war was SACD, No problem there SACD took a big dive in both dollars and units. Regrattably the unit volume AND dollar increase in DVD-A failed to make up for the SACD losses. Hirez 1H 2004 dollar volume: $11.53 million Hirez 1H 2003 dollar volume: $15.66 million Year-year loss in dollar volume for Hi Rez formats $4.13 million SACD vs. cassette shows analog tape the loser which is no surprise to me. IMO a totally ludicrous comparison. I think your assertion that "HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage." should be tempered with the following article. http://www.stereophile.com/digitalso...fth/index.html Sony/Philips may need to enforce some sort of quality control over SACD. Stereophile doesn't seem to believe in doing time-synchronized, level-matched, bias-controlled comparisons. IOW their opinons are meaningless. Furthermore, it is well known that as a rule, hi-rez re-releases are remastered, which means that they are essentially different artistic works. If SACD is dying so horribly, why did McIntosh introduce their first universal (read SACD too) player this year? Because it took them way to long to come to market with that product? It wasn't because they felt it would be a waste of time and money. Since McIntosh is a vanity subsidiary of a large conglomerate, who knows what money counts for them. Putting all that aside, the interesting fact is that while the number of DVD units went up 100%, the total dollars went up a bit over 50%. My figures show that total hi-rez dollar sales dropped significantly when as a new format, they should be growing dramatically. That means that retails prices have dropped significantly. It is apparant that DVD certainly is becoming more attractive in terms of price. Make it cheap and they will buy. Except that cutting prices didn't help increase sales in dollars or total Hi-Rez sales in units. Speaking of prices, have you compared the prices of DVD, DVD-A, SACD, and CD lately? It would appear that Sony/Philips actually wants to kill off the medium. Until Sony/Phillips actually makes it attractive to produce hybrid CD/SACD, the format will likely fade away. As it is right now, the retails prices are about $1.00 more for the hybrid over a plain CD. If there was a widely-perceived sonic advantage, $1 of more than a dozen shouldn't matter. Who will be the first to put a multichannel system in a car? More importantly, will it be a universal player that plays all formats? http://www.soundandvisionmag.com/art...article_id=477 &pa ge_number=2 says "...at January's Consumer Electronics Show, three companies - Eclipse, Kenwood, and Pioneer - announced DVD-A-ready heads ...." "Sony tells me there are no current plans to introduce a car-specific SACD player. The company says it will someday, but there's no official timetable yet." This begs the question why? Probably because Sony is about ready to $#!#-can the format. What is Sony/Philips doing? Why wait? Why spend good money after bad? Why not push for SACD/DVD-A/etc in the car? They've pushed but there was a lot of resistance. It does make someone wonder what the hell is going on at Sony and company. They're thinking of treating hi-rez audio like it was a business? Compare the numbers on the link you gave to the numbers at http://www.riaa.com/news/marketingda...d_yr_chart.pdf which is the 2002-2003 mid year stats. SACD isn't there at all. What does that mean? It means that 2003 was the first year that SACD was included. So what, the point here is to compare comparable stats. My assesment? It is a bit early to tell. It all depends on what Sony/Phillips does. SACD the next BetaMax? Could be. Maybe it will become ubiquitous like the CD. Maybe it will all become a moot point if the new Blu-Ray format takes off. Here is another tidbit for those TV addicts. You may be watching more commercials than you are now, TIVO or not. "... Congress is getting ready to vote on the omnibus Intellectual Property Protection Bill which has provisions tacked on that, if passed, could prevent users from skipping commercials on DVDs and recorded broadcasts [read TiVO], according to Public Knowledge, a public-interest advocacy group." http://www.tvtechnology.com/dailynews/one.php?id=2508 Being forced to watch commercials is just what everybody wants! ;-) |
#4
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... I think your assertion that "HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage." should be tempered with the following article. Why are you including DTS in this discussion of hi-rez formats? It clearly isn't higher rez, seeks a slightly different market with the concert video vs just music and is multichannel. But it ain't hi-rez. ScottW |
#5
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"ScottW" said:
I think your assertion that "HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage." should be tempered with the following article. Why are you including DTS in this discussion of hi-rez formats? It clearly isn't higher rez, seeks a slightly different market with the concert video vs just music and is multichannel. But it ain't hi-rez. Please don't confuse Ahnuld with facts. Besides, he's always "right ;-)" , you know. -- Sander de Waal " SOA of a KT88? Sufficient. " |
#6
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On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 10:07:47 -0800, "ScottW"
wrote: "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... I think your assertion that "HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage." should be tempered with the following article. Why are you including DTS in this discussion of hi-rez formats? It clearly isn't higher rez, seeks a slightly different market with the concert video vs just music and is multichannel. But it ain't hi-rez. ScottW Just a note that the above quote isn't Arnold's. |
#7
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"ScottW" wrote in message
news:XJLnd.111761$bk1.92893@fed1read05 "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... I think your assertion that "HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage." should be tempered with the following article. Why are you including DTS in this discussion of hi-rez formats? It clearly isn't higher rez, seeks a slightly different market with the concert video vs just music and is multichannel. But it ain't hi-rez. http://www.dtsonline.com/consumer/pr...&yID=2004&cID= "Swedish Radio and DTS announce that they have made two more pioneering steps in delivering the highest quality surround sound ever in a live broadcast: First, Swedish Radio is the first broadcaster to utilize DTS 96/24 high resolution digital surround sound for a live event; and second, Swedish Radio proved the capability of offering DTS 96/24 via Internet broadband streaming. These advances come one year after Swedish Radio commenced the world's first broadcast of surround sound via satellite utilizing the scalable DVB-compliant audio technology from DTS. Offering a sample rate double that of standard DVDs, DTS 96/24 offers the highest resolution available to broadcasters." http://www.highfidelityreview.com/ne...umber=18971538 "Texas Instruments are to demonstrate an all-digital, universal system at CES 2003 next week. The Texas semiconductor manufacturer has integrated a FireWire IEEE-1293 interface, multi-channel digital signal processor and digital amplifier technologies onto a single board, which will enable the company to show attendees the ability to create an integrated high-resolution path from source component to loudspeakers using TI technologies." "The Texas Instruments Semiconductor Division's demonstration of the single-board system at CES, will take place at booth 6802 in the Las Vegas Convention Center. Product capabilities include: a.. Native IEEE-1394 networking b.. Dolby Digital, DTS and full-resolution digital SACD and DVD-Audio c.. Optional content protection for compatibility with high- resolution formats d.. High performance, flexible, multi-format audio decoding with a re-programmable 32/64-bit audio processing e.. TI PurePath DigitalT amplifiers http://www.stereophile.com/news/110804dts/ "How can video save the audio star? Recent announcements from both Dolby and DTS have revealed plans to add high-resolution lossless audio formats to one or both impending High Definition video disc formats. And if one or both of these primarily HD video formats takes off, high-resolution audio will be along for the ride." I suggest you do a little google searching next time, Scotty. |
#8
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"dave weil" wrote in message
news ![]() On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 10:07:47 -0800, "ScottW" wrote: "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... I think your assertion that "HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage." should be tempered with the following article. Why are you including DTS in this discussion of hi-rez formats? It clearly isn't higher rez, seeks a slightly different market with the concert video vs just music and is multichannel. But it ain't hi-rez. ScottW Just a note that the above quote isn't Arnold's. But it reasonbly paraphrases what I said in a previous post: "If you check the records of Usenet groups, you will see that it has long been known, based on ABX and other blind listening tests, that so-called hi-rez audio formats such as HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage." |
#9
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in
: "R" wrote in message . 1 "Arny Krueger" wrote in : If you check the records of Usenet groups, you will see that it has long been known, based on ABX and other blind listening tests, that so-called hi-rez audio formats such as HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage. So what is the box score for the market sucess of these formats? Well, HDCD is now reduced to being a subfeature of the Windows Media Player, DTS is no longer in the news, and DVD-A and SACD are dying on the vine sales-wise. For recent information about the latter two formats, check the RIAA sales statistics posted at http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf . What they show is that same-half-year sales of SACD recordings has dropped by more than half from 2003 to 2004. DVD-A sales increases failed to take up the slack. Total first-half 2004 sales of recordings in both formats were about 600,000 units. which is about 0.2% of the sales of CD-Audio recordings. Even cassette and vinyl which are even more lower-rez than CD-Audio vastly outsold the two latest so-called Hi-rez formats! While the so-called hi-rez formats were struggling to sell mere recordings at an annualized rate of 1.2 million units, lower-rez formats such as MP3 and AAC were responsible for sales of millions and millions of players. Sales of low-rez format recordings over the web are also booming. There seems to be a lesson here, being that audio technology that can't prove itself in ABX and other DBT listening tests, can resaonably be expected to do poorly in the marketplace. Arny, You might want to look at the numbers again. I prefer to look at number of units sold - not dollar amounts. It tells a more accurate story and reveals additional information when compared to dollars. DVD-A units went up over 100% DVD Video unit went up by over 100% CD units went up by over 10% Vinyl went down 8.4% SACD went down by over 54% Cassette went down over 68% CD singles went down over 55% While the clear loser in the DVD-A vs SACD war was SACD, No problem there SACD took a big dive in both dollars and units. Regrattably the unit volume AND dollar increase in DVD-A failed to make up for the SACD losses. Hirez 1H 2004 dollar volume: $11.53 million Hirez 1H 2003 dollar volume: $15.66 million Year-year loss in dollar volume for Hi Rez formats $4.13 million SACD vs. cassette shows analog tape the loser which is no surprise to me. IMO a totally ludicrous comparison. Not really. Cassette, LP, and SACD all went down. However DVD-A when up over 100%. Who in their right mind would pull the plug on DVD-A when they just saw 100% growth? Hi-Res is far from dead and it isn't even feeling poorly. I think your assertion that "HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage." should be tempered with the following article. http://www.stereophile.com/digitalso...fth/index.html Sony/Philips may need to enforce some sort of quality control over SACD. Stereophile doesn't seem to believe in doing time-synchronized, level-matched, bias-controlled comparisons. IOW their opinons are meaningless. Furthermore, it is well known that as a rule, hi-rez re-releases are remastered, which means that they are essentially different artistic works. You didn't read the article dammit. It was a implied test where even sighted expectations were contrary to the truth. I suggest the following: http://www.pcworld.com/reviews/artic...,114731,00.asp "Once I heard SACD, I knew I could never go back to regular CDs." "SACD and DVD-A make normal CDs sound like AM radio." Bash the Hi-Res formats all you want, but the fact of the matter is many people do hear a difference and a big one at that. If SACD is dying so horribly, why did McIntosh introduce their first universal (read SACD too) player this year? Because it took them way to long to come to market with that product? Maybe they waited for the royalties to drop in price. It has just recently that the price to get SACD player to market has been attractive to manufacturers. It wasn't because they felt it would be a waste of time and money. Since McIntosh is a vanity subsidiary of a large conglomerate, who knows what money counts for them. Do you think they are in the business to lose money? No. McIntosh is very much alive and well and making money, thank you. Putting all that aside, the interesting fact is that while the number of DVD units went up 100%, the total dollars went up a bit over 50%. My figures show that total hi-rez dollar sales dropped significantly when as a new format, they should be growing dramatically. My point was that in the grand scheme of things, people spend a certain amount of money for entertainment. If they get a bigger bang for their buck with a DVD, guess where the dollars go? Straight to DVD with little left over for other forms of entertainment. Why spend $15.00 or more for audio only when one can get audio and video for $10.00? That means that retails prices have dropped significantly. It is apparant that DVD certainly is becoming more attractive in terms of price. Make it cheap and they will buy. Except that cutting prices didn't help increase sales in dollars or total Hi-Rez sales in units. It is apparant that price cutting only occured in the DVD area, not others. Speaking of prices, have you compared the prices of DVD, DVD-A, SACD, and CD lately? It would appear that Sony/Philips actually wants to kill off the medium. Until Sony/Phillips actually makes it attractive to produce hybrid CD/SACD, the format will likely fade away. As it is right now, the retails prices are about $1.00 more for the hybrid over a plain CD. If there was a widely-perceived sonic advantage, $1 of more than a dozen shouldn't matter. But most people don't care. The average consumer is lucky to be able to tell the difference between a 128k MP3 and a CD. Why do you think Bose is still n business? The average consumer is either ignorant or stupid. Who will be the first to put a multichannel system in a car? More importantly, will it be a universal player that plays all formats? http://www.soundandvisionmag.com/art...=7&article_id= 477 &pa ge_number=2 says "...at January's Consumer Electronics Show, three companies - Eclipse, Kenwood, and Pioneer - announced DVD-A-ready heads ...." "Sony tells me there are no current plans to introduce a car-specific SACD player. The company says it will someday, but there's no official timetable yet." This begs the question why? Probably because Sony is about ready to $#!#-can the format. That is not apparant nor obvious. If they fail to market the format any further over the next 12 months, then it will become clearer. DVD-A had a much larger head start. As a matter of fact SACD was the solution that Sony/Philips came up with in response to the DVD/DVD-A. What is Sony/Philips doing? Why wait? Why spend good money after bad? That certainly is one conclusion. Maybe there is a completely different plan in the wings. I do know of several people who would know, but they aren't talking, so anything you and I may say would be pure speculation based on little or no facts. Why not push for SACD/DVD-A/etc in the car? They've pushed but there was a lot of resistance. The resistance isn't at the consumer level I assure you. It does make someone wonder what the hell is going on at Sony and company. They're thinking of treating hi-rez audio like it was a business? Maybe, they are rethinking things. Maybe Blu-ray is going to be the proverbial "IT". One format for all. CD/DVD/Hi-Res-Audio all on one disc. Maybe, maybe, maybe. Until we have either a good working crystal ball or some inside info because someone blabbed, we won't know for sure what is going on at Sony/Phillips. Compare the numbers on the link you gave to the numbers at http://www.riaa.com/news/marketingda...d_yr_chart.pdf which is the 2002-2003 mid year stats. SACD isn't there at all. What does that mean? It means that 2003 was the first year that SACD was included. So what, the point here is to compare comparable stats. But is it fair to make a supposition based on the stats whike a format is in it's infancy? My assesment? It is a bit early to tell. It all depends on what Sony/Phillips does. SACD the next BetaMax? Could be. Maybe it will become ubiquitous like the CD. Maybe it will all become a moot point if the new Blu-Ray format takes off. Here is another tidbit for those TV addicts. You may be watching more commercials than you are now, TIVO or not. "... Congress is getting ready to vote on the omnibus Intellectual Property Protection Bill which has provisions tacked on that, if passed, could prevent users from skipping commercials on DVDs and recorded broadcasts [read TiVO], according to Public Knowledge, a public-interest advocacy group." http://www.tvtechnology.com/dailynews/one.php?id=2508 Being forced to watch commercials is just what everybody wants! ;-) I appreciate your sarcasm. Personally I think that if they keep it up, both video entertainment and the internet will turn into a advertising wasteland like broadcast radio unless the people speak up. r -- Nothing beats the bandwidth of a station wagon filled with DLT tapes. |
#10
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "ScottW" wrote in message news:XJLnd.111761$bk1.92893@fed1read05 "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... I think your assertion that "HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage." should be tempered with the following article. Why are you including DTS in this discussion of hi-rez formats? It clearly isn't higher rez, seeks a slightly different market with the concert video vs just music and is multichannel. But it ain't hi-rez. http://www.dtsonline.com/consumer/pr...&yID=2004&cID= "Swedish Radio and DTS announce that they have made two more pioneering steps in delivering the highest quality surround sound ever in a live broadcast: First, Swedish Radio is the first broadcaster to utilize DTS 96/24 high resolution digital surround sound for a live event; and second, Swedish Radio proved the capability of offering DTS 96/24 via Internet broadband streaming. These advances come one year after Swedish Radio commenced the world's first broadcast of surround sound via satellite utilizing the scalable DVB-compliant audio technology from DTS. Offering a sample rate double that of standard DVDs, DTS 96/24 offers the highest resolution available to broadcasters." http://www.highfidelityreview.com/ne...umber=18971538 "Texas Instruments are to demonstrate an all-digital, universal system at CES 2003 next week. The Texas semiconductor manufacturer has integrated a FireWire IEEE-1293 interface, multi-channel digital signal processor and digital amplifier technologies onto a single board, which will enable the company to show attendees the ability to create an integrated high-resolution path from source component to loudspeakers using TI technologies." "The Texas Instruments Semiconductor Division's demonstration of the single-board system at CES, will take place at booth 6802 in the Las Vegas Convention Center. Product capabilities include: a.. Native IEEE-1394 networking b.. Dolby Digital, DTS and full-resolution digital SACD and DVD-Audio c.. Optional content protection for compatibility with high- resolution formats d.. High performance, flexible, multi-format audio decoding with a re-programmable 32/64-bit audio processing e.. TI PurePath DigitalT amplifiers http://www.stereophile.com/news/110804dts/ "How can video save the audio star? Recent announcements from both Dolby and DTS have revealed plans to add high-resolution lossless audio formats to one or both impending High Definition video disc formats. And if one or both of these primarily HD video formats takes off, high-resolution audio will be along for the ride." I suggest you do a little google searching next time, Scotty. I suggest you be a little more specific as DTS and DTS 96/24 are hardly the same thing to any reasonably qualified audio engineer. ScottW |
#11
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"ScottW" wrote in message
news:jZNnd.111772$bk1.49879@fed1read05 "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "ScottW" wrote in message news:XJLnd.111761$bk1.92893@fed1read05 "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... I think your assertion that "HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage." should be tempered with the following article. Why are you including DTS in this discussion of hi-rez formats? It clearly isn't higher rez, seeks a slightly different market with the concert video vs just music and is multichannel. But it ain't hi-rez. http://www.dtsonline.com/consumer/pr...&yID=2004&cID= "Swedish Radio and DTS announce that they have made two more pioneering steps in delivering the highest quality surround sound ever in a live broadcast: First, Swedish Radio is the first broadcaster to utilize DTS 96/24 high resolution digital surround sound for a live event; and second, Swedish Radio proved the capability of offering DTS 96/24 via Internet broadband streaming. These advances come one year after Swedish Radio commenced the world's first broadcast of surround sound via satellite utilizing the scalable DVB-compliant audio technology from DTS. Offering a sample rate double that of standard DVDs, DTS 96/24 offers the highest resolution available to broadcasters." http://www.highfidelityreview.com/ne...umber=18971538 "Texas Instruments are to demonstrate an all-digital, universal system at CES 2003 next week. The Texas semiconductor manufacturer has integrated a FireWire IEEE-1293 interface, multi-channel digital signal processor and digital amplifier technologies onto a single board, which will enable the company to show attendees the ability to create an integrated high-resolution path from source component to loudspeakers using TI technologies." "The Texas Instruments Semiconductor Division's demonstration of the single-board system at CES, will take place at booth 6802 in the Las Vegas Convention Center. Product capabilities include: a.. Native IEEE-1394 networking b.. Dolby Digital, DTS and full-resolution digital SACD and DVD-Audio c.. Optional content protection for compatibility with high- resolution formats d.. High performance, flexible, multi-format audio decoding with a re-programmable 32/64-bit audio processing e.. TI PurePath DigitalT amplifiers http://www.stereophile.com/news/110804dts/ "How can video save the audio star? Recent announcements from both Dolby and DTS have revealed plans to add high-resolution lossless audio formats to one or both impending High Definition video disc formats. And if one or both of these primarily HD video formats takes off, high-resolution audio will be along for the ride." I suggest you do a little google searching next time, Scotty. I suggest you be a little more specific as DTS and DTS 96/24 are hardly the same thing to any reasonably qualified audio engineer. LOL! It's amazing Scott how low you or Sander will sink to avoid admitting you made a mistake. |
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... If you check the records of Usenet groups, you will see that it has long been known, based on ABX and other blind listening tests, that so-called hi-rez audio formats such as HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage. So what is the box score for the market sucess of these formats? Well, HDCD is now reduced to being a subfeature of the Windows Media Player, DTS is no longer in the news, and DVD-A and SACD are dying on the vine sales-wise. Congratulations, Arny, on your triumph over high fidelity. Thanks to you, we are doomed to listen to mp3. Unless you're not omnipotent. |
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"Robert Morein" wrote in
: "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... If you check the records of Usenet groups, you will see that it has long been known, based on ABX and other blind listening tests, that so-called hi-rez audio formats such as HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage. So what is the box score for the market sucess of these formats? Well, HDCD is now reduced to being a subfeature of the Windows Media Player, DTS is no longer in the news, and DVD-A and SACD are dying on the vine sales-wise. Congratulations, Arny, on your triumph over high fidelity. Thanks to you, we are doomed to listen to mp3. Unless you're not omnipotent. Personally I don't understand his vendetta against high res formats. There are too many people arguing for it including some highly respected labels like Telarc. r -- Nothing beats the bandwidth of a station wagon filled with DLT tapes. |
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"Robert Morein" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... If you check the records of Usenet groups, you will see that it has long been known, based on ABX and other blind listening tests, that so-called hi-rez audio formats such as HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage. So what is the box score for the market sucess of these formats? Well, HDCD is now reduced to being a subfeature of the Windows Media Player, DTS is no longer in the news, and DVD-A and SACD are dying on the vine sales-wise. Congratulations, Arny, on your triumph over high fidelity. Horsefeathers. Thanks to you, we are doomed to listen to mp3. That's a choice you get to make. Unless you're not omnipotent. And of course I'm not omnipotent, but true science comes closer. |
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"R" wrote in message
Personally I don't understand his vendetta against high res formats. They are snake oil, There are too many people arguing for it including some highly respected labels like Telarc. They are only trying to serve themselves at the expense of the public and the art and science of audio. |
#16
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
... Arny Krueger wrote: For recent information about the latter two formats, check the RIAA sales statistics posted at http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf. What they show is that same-half-year sales of SACD recordings has dropped by more than half from 2003 to 2004. ... the unit volume AND dollar increase in DVD-A failed to make up for the SACD losses. It appears that hybrid SACDs that are racked and sold as CDs -- the Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan releases, for example -- are tallied as CDs, not SACDs in the RIAA sales statistics. I do not know if this will change the picture. John Atkinson Editor, Stereophile |
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Robert Morein" wrote in message "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... If you check the records of Usenet groups, you will see that it has long been known, based on ABX and other blind listening tests, that so-called hi-rez audio formats such as HDCD, DTS, SACD, and DVD-A offer little or no sonic advantage. So what is the box score for the market sucess of these formats? Well, HDCD is now reduced to being a subfeature of the Windows Media Player, DTS is no longer in the news, and DVD-A and SACD are dying on the vine sales-wise. Congratulations, Arny, on your triumph over high fidelity. Horsefeathers. Thanks to you, we are doomed to listen to mp3. That's a choice you get to make. Unless you're not omnipotent. And of course I'm not omnipotent, but true science comes closer. No, really, I offer my sincere congratulations to you for the despoilation of audio. You've conquered it and salted the earth. Rejoice! |
#18
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in
news ![]() "R" wrote in message Personally I don't understand his vendetta against high res formats. They are snake oil, There are too many people arguing for it including some highly respected labels like Telarc. They are only trying to serve themselves at the expense of the public and the art and science of audio. Arny, This time I am going to say you are wrong and leave it at that. Nothing that I could say or do will convince you otherwise so I am dropping the issue. Continue slamming the hi-res multichannel formats all you want. I don't care. I hope you have a nice day and a happy holiday. r -- Nothing beats the bandwidth of a station wagon filled with DLT tapes. |
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"John Atkinson" wrote in message
om "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Arny Krueger wrote: For recent information about the latter two formats, check the RIAA sales statistics posted at http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf. What they show is that same-half-year sales of SACD recordings has dropped by more than half from 2003 to 2004. ... the unit volume AND dollar increase in DVD-A failed to make up for the SACD losses. It appears that hybrid SACDs that are racked and sold as CDs -- the Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan releases, for example -- are tallied as CDs, not SACDs in the RIAA sales statistics. I do not know if this will change the picture. Why would that appear to be the case? I've always thought that the highly-touted Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan releases for Christmas season 2002-2003 contributed to the far higher reported SACD sales for 2003. |
#20
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"R" wrote in message
. 1 "Arny Krueger" wrote in news ![]() "R" wrote in message Personally I don't understand his vendetta against high res formats. They are snake oil, There are too many people arguing for it including some highly respected labels like Telarc. They are only trying to serve themselves at the expense of the public and the art and science of audio. This time I am going to say you are wrong and leave it at that. Unsupported opinion noted. Nothing that I could say or do will convince you otherwise There's lots of things you could say, like "I did a time-synched, level-matched DBT comparing one of these hi-rez recordings to a version of it that differed only by downsampling to 16/44, and reliably heard a difference." so I am dropping the issue. Obviously, you have nothing factual to contribute. Continue slamming the hi-res multichannel formats all you want. I don't care. Just the facts! I hope you have a nice day and a happy holiday. Yup, me and all my hi-rez audio gear. Seriously. |
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... I suggest you be a little more specific as DTS and DTS 96/24 are hardly the same thing to any reasonably qualified audio engineer. LOL! It's amazing Scott how low you or Sander will sink to avoid admitting you made a mistake. Inability to refute my point is noted. ScottW |
#22
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in
: "R" wrote in message . 1 "Arny Krueger" wrote in news ![]() "R" wrote in message Personally I don't understand his vendetta against high res formats. They are snake oil, There are too many people arguing for it including some highly respected labels like Telarc. They are only trying to serve themselves at the expense of the public and the art and science of audio. This time I am going to say you are wrong and leave it at that. Unsupported opinion noted. Nothing that I could say or do will convince you otherwise There's lots of things you could say, like "I did a time-synched, level-matched DBT comparing one of these hi-rez recordings to a version of it that differed only by downsampling to 16/44, and reliably heard a difference." so I am dropping the issue. Obviously, you have nothing factual to contribute. Continue slamming the hi-res multichannel formats all you want. I don't care. Just the facts! I hope you have a nice day and a happy holiday. Yup, me and all my hi-rez audio gear. Seriously. Arny, If I said that I did a double blind, time synced, level matched test you would likely not believe me. I am just not interested in debating the issue with you. You made it abundantly clear how you feel and I don't agree with you. Have a nice evening and a nice holiday. r -- Nothing beats the bandwidth of a station wagon filled with DLT tapes. |
#23
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![]() "George M. Middius" wrote in message ... Robert Morein said to ****borg: No, really, I offer my sincere congratulations to you for the despoilation of audio. You're going to ignite Harold's envy. You've conquered it and salted the earth. Rejoice! If salting the earth was Krooger's intention, why does he hoard all the feces? I assumed it was for fertilizer, at least partly. For the nitrates. |
#24
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"R" wrote in message
. 1 If I said that I did a double blind, time synced, level matched test you would likely not believe me. I would know if you were telling the truth, becauase I know what the results of that test would be. I am just not interested in debating the issue with you. Except you keep going back on your word and vainly attempt to make the last point. You made it abundantly clear how you feel and I don't agree with you. It's not a matter of how I feel, its a matter of what the facts of the matter actuall are. |
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On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 07:14:10 -0500, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: "R" wrote in message .1 If I said that I did a double blind, time synced, level matched test you would likely not believe me. I would know if you were telling the truth, becauase I know what the results of that test would be. Ype, let's just throw science out the window... |
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"dave weil" wrote in message
On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 07:14:10 -0500, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "R" wrote in message . 1 If I said that I did a double blind, time synced, level matched test you would likely not believe me. I would know if you were telling the truth, becauase I know what the results of that test would be. Ype, let's just throw science out the window... How is that comment relevant? Or Weil, do you think that scientific experiments that have been performed thousands of times by thousands of people will suddenly start giving different results? |
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "R" wrote in message . 1 I would know if you were telling the truth, becauase I know what the results of that test would be. The 'scientific mind' at work! |
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On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 07:44:00 -0500, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: "dave weil" wrote in message On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 07:14:10 -0500, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "R" wrote in message . 1 If I said that I did a double blind, time synced, level matched test you would likely not believe me. I would know if you were telling the truth, becauase I know what the results of that test would be. Yep, let's just throw science out the window... How is that comment relevant? Or Weil, do you think that scientific experiments that have been performed thousands of times by thousands of people will suddenly start giving different results? You need to supply proof that it would be impossible for the above individual to be able to tell the difference. Otherwise, you're just blabbering. |
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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "John Atkinson" wrote in message om "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Arny Krueger wrote: For recent information about the latter two formats, check the RIAA sales statistics posted at http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf. What they show is that same-half-year sales of SACD recordings has dropped by more than half from 2003 to 2004. ... the unit volume AND dollar increase in DVD-A failed to make up for the SACD losses. It appears that hybrid SACDs that are racked and sold as CDs -- the Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan releases, for example -- are tallied as CDs, not SACDs in the RIAA sales statistics. I do not know if this will change the picture. Why would that appear to be the case? I've always thought that the highly-touted Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan releases for Christmas season 2002-2003 contributed to the far higher reported SACD sales for 2003. JA is correct. Over here (SEAsia), Rolling Stones (Hybrid) are sold as CDs. |
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"Chelvam" wrote in message
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "John Atkinson" wrote in message om "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Arny Krueger wrote: For recent information about the latter two formats, check the RIAA sales statistics posted at http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf. What they show is that same-half-year sales of SACD recordings has dropped by more than half from 2003 to 2004. ... the unit volume AND dollar increase in DVD-A failed to make up for the SACD losses. It appears that hybrid SACDs that are racked and sold as CDs -- the Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan releases, for example -- are tallied as CDs, not SACDs in the RIAA sales statistics. I do not know if this will change the picture. Why would that appear to be the case? I've always thought that the highly-touted Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan releases for Christmas season 2002-2003 contributed to the far higher reported SACD sales for 2003. JA is correct. Not necessarily. He's made an unsupported assertion, as have you. Over here (SEAsia), Rolling Stones (Hybrid) are sold as CDs. However, that says zilch about how they are accounted for in RIAA stats. I'm going to take a wild leap of faith and suggest that the people who produce these discs know what they are. |
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"dave weil" wrote in message
On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 07:44:00 -0500, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "dave weil" wrote in message On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 07:14:10 -0500, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "R" wrote in message . 1 If I said that I did a double blind, time synced, level matched test you would likely not believe me. I would know if you were telling the truth, becauase I know what the results of that test would be. Yep, let's just throw science out the window... How is that comment relevant? Or Weil, do you think that scientific experiments that have been performed thousands of times by thousands of people will suddenly start giving different results? You need to supply proof that it would be impossible for the above individual to be able to tell the difference. I'm going to take my second wild leap of faith for the morning and suggest that he's human, and neither a bat nor a dog. Otherwise, you're just blabbering. First cure yourself of that disease, Weil. |
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"George M. Middius" wrote in message
dave weil said: If I said that I did a double blind, time synced, level matched test you would likely not believe me. I would know if you were telling the truth, becauase I know what the results of that test would be. Ype, let's just throw science out the window... The Krooborg's estrangement from science gets deeper and more intractable with every passing year. Your reference to science reminds me we should reflect on how real scientists work. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Traditional Scientific Method 1. State the question or problem clearly http://www.provide.net/~djcarlst/abx_p9.htm 2. Study all available data to see how they relate to the problem. http://www.provide.net/~djcarlst/abx_data.htm 3. Formulate various hypotheses to explain all of the known facts. All is a big word, but here are a few places that cover some of the more important relevant facts: http://www.provide.net/~djcarlst/abx_crit.htm http://www.pcabx.com/ 4. Design an experiment to test the validity of the hypotheses, starting from the most general. http://www.provide.net/~djcarlst/abx_p9.htm http://www.provide.net/~djcarlst/abx_book.htm 5. Conduct the experiment, using a control if practical. http://www.pcabx.com/ 6. Evaluate the results to determine whether the hypothesis under test was supported or invalidated. http://www.provide.net/~djcarlst/abx_bino.htm 7. Repeat these steps for all hypotheses until only one is still valid. Left as an exercise for the reader. * * * * * * * * * * * * That's what real scientists do in the real world. It's rigorous, but it's supposed to be. The objective is to execute an experiment that another scientist can run and see if it works another time. Now let's pop in on the Hive.... * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Middius' High-Predictability "Scientific" Method 1. Decide what conclusion you want to reach. It's best to do this now -- it simplifies your experiments and eliminates the need for all that time- consuming hypothesizing. In the high end world this is done all the time. For example, the means for doing it have been rigorously described in Stereophile Magazine several times, most notably as "The Listener's Manifesto" 2. Line up the data that support your premise and invent rationalizations to show that these data are "better" than others. In the high end world this is done all the time. For example, the means for doing it have been rigorously described in Stereophile Magazine several times, most notably as "The Recommended Components List" Also, if time permits, jot down some notes on why data reported by people with whom you disagree shouldn't be considered in your "experiments." In the high end world this is done all the time. For example, the means for doing it have been rigorously described in Stereophile Magazine several times, most notably as "Blind Listening" 3. No hypothesizing is necessary because the desired conclusion is already known, so go on to the experiments. In the high end world this is done all the time. For example, the means for doing it have been rigorously described in Stereophile Magazine many times in every issue. 4. Set up an experiment that is bound and certain to reinforce your desired conclusion. Again, please see any issue of Stereophile. 5. If people are watching, pretend to run the "experiment". Be sure to fake a demeanor of impartiality and devotion to truth. In the high end world this is done all the time. For example, the means for doing it have been rigorously described in Stereophile Magazine several times, most notably as the William P. Banks & David Krajicek Amplifier listening tests and Atkinson's attempts to do about the same thing. 6. Promulgate the results of your "science" as noisily and as obnoxiously as possible. Make sure you shout down and ridicule anyone who criticizes your hypothesis (chuckle), your method, or your conclusion. Experience has shown that you can usually deflect criticism, no matter how well-founded it is in reality, by impugning the motives of your critics. For many examples of this go to the Stereophile web site and search on *blind*. 7. Sit back, complacent and smug, and trumpet to all and sundry that you've "proved" your theory and that no more "science" need be brought to bear on this issue. Again, just search the Stereophile web site using the word blind. Also see the Stereophile article "The Highs And Lows of Double Blind Testing". |
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On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 09:34:28 -0500, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: "Chelvam" wrote in message "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "John Atkinson" wrote in message om "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Arny Krueger wrote: For recent information about the latter two formats, check the RIAA sales statistics posted at http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf. What they show is that same-half-year sales of SACD recordings has dropped by more than half from 2003 to 2004. ... the unit volume AND dollar increase in DVD-A failed to make up for the SACD losses. It appears that hybrid SACDs that are racked and sold as CDs -- the Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan releases, for example -- are tallied as CDs, not SACDs in the RIAA sales statistics. I do not know if this will change the picture. Why would that appear to be the case? I've always thought that the highly-touted Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan releases for Christmas season 2002-2003 contributed to the far higher reported SACD sales for 2003. JA is correct. Not necessarily. He's made an unsupported assertion, as have you. Over here (SEAsia), Rolling Stones (Hybrid) are sold as CDs. However, that says zilch about how they are accounted for in RIAA stats. I'm going to take a wild leap of faith and suggest that the people who produce these discs know what they are. Well, since the RIAA stats are pretty inaccurate in the first place, I'm not sure if it really makes that much of a difference. |
#35
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On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 09:37:18 -0500, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: "dave weil" wrote in message On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 07:44:00 -0500, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "dave weil" wrote in message On Mon, 22 Nov 2004 07:14:10 -0500, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "R" wrote in message . 1 If I said that I did a double blind, time synced, level matched test you would likely not believe me. I would know if you were telling the truth, becauase I know what the results of that test would be. Yep, let's just throw science out the window... How is that comment relevant? Or Weil, do you think that scientific experiments that have been performed thousands of times by thousands of people will suddenly start giving different results? You need to supply proof that it would be impossible for the above individual to be able to tell the difference. I'm going to take my second wild leap of faith for the morning and suggest that he's human, and neither a bat nor a dog. Lack of proof noted. |
#36
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![]() Arny Krueger wrote: While the so-called hi-rez formats were struggling to sell mere recordings at an annualized rate of 1.2 million units, lower-rez formats such as MP3 and AAC were responsible for sales of millions and millions of players. Sales of low-rez format recordings over the web are also booming. That's just great. Come 2010 we'll all be hoarded about by our global president, jeb bush, we'll all just watch the fox news channel "they report, they decide" and for entertainment listen to downsampled mp3's of AC/DC and Kiss and NOT charlie haden (for instance), and seventhousandeighthundred songs all comprrresssssed and stuck into one CD for our convinience! Evolution, improvement, preference, enhancement, enrichment, excellence, luxury, quality shall not be tolerated! All your bases are belong to us! Resistance is futile! Heil the kroogborg! ... Not. ![]() |
#37
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"Fella" wrote in message
Arny Krueger wrote: While the so-called hi-rez formats were struggling to sell mere recordings at an annualized rate of 1.2 million units, lower-rez formats such as MP3 and AAC were responsible for sales of millions and millions of players. Sales of low-rez format recordings over the web are also booming. That's just great. In the context of helping people enjoy more music more often, I agree. The good news for me is that some portable players now have enough storage capacity that they can handle uncompressed audio very nicely, thank you. I love my NJB3 and all the ripped CDs that reside within in uncompressed .wav file format. iPods can do this, as well. Come 2010 we'll all be hoarded about by our global president, jeb bush, we'll all just watch the fox news channel "they report, they decide" and for entertainment listen to downsampled mp3's of AC/DC and Kiss and NOT charlie haden (for instance), and seventhousandeighthundred songs all comprrresssssed and stuck into one CD for our convinience! Evolution, improvement, preference, enhancement, enrichment, excellence, luxury, quality shall not be tolerated! All your bases are belong to us! Resistance is futile! Heil the kroogborg! ... Not. ![]() Agreed, your vision of 2010 is not one that I would look forward to. |
#39
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Arny Krueger wrote:
Agreed, your vision of 2010 is not one that I would look forward to. Ah, so you would not be looking forward to consuming the very same **** you are trying to propagate? Curious. |
#40
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![]() Arny Krueger wrote: For recent information about the latter two formats, check the RIAA sales statistics posted at http://www.riaa.com/news/newsletter/...midYrStats.pdf. What they show is that same-half-year sales of SACD recordings has dropped by more than half from 2003 to 2004. False claim. |
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