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#1
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![]() Let's start with the obvious. Consumer audio is rife with high-priced stuff. A lot of it is "overpriced" if you define that to mean "priced out of proportion to its utility", where the baseline for value is set by the lowest-priced stuff. Now we've established that simple fact, let's get to what's wrong with you 'borgs. Of course you can't afford the expensive stuff. Neither can most people. Guess what? $10,000 amps and $30,000 speakers aren't marketed to the likes of you. You don't want that stuff and the people who sell it don't want you as customers. (It's true you don't want it, right?) We know you can't afford it. Tough. We also know you don't understand the luxury goods market. All you understand about value is how much something costs. All your bleating about "tests" and "proof" and "claims" is a smokescreen. Yes, we know marketing talk is largely BS. But it's you 'borgs who can't accept that the same hype happens in audio as in every other luxury category. Best Buy, as an example, sells hundreds of low-priced boxes out of each store each week. A high-end salon sells a few boxes each week. "Amps is amps!" shriek the 'borgs. Then how do you explain the fact that high-end salons have a steady stream of customers, many of them repeat customers? "Ripoff!" intone the 'borgs, showing their abysmal ignorance. You 'borgs don't get it. You're clueless. You're completely lost. You believe with all your metronic hearts that audio should be utilitarian. Well, guess what -- it's not. As long as there's a segment of the market that will pay for fancy nameplates and toadying service, some suppliers will go into business to satisfy that demand. The high end is not for you. Turn around and go shop where you're wanted. |
#2
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![]() George M. Middius wrote: Let's start with the obvious. I wish your English expression were more obvious. Wading through the verbiage I think what it is you are trying to say is:- 1. People will always pay for status symbols. 2. It's no use 'borgs' complaining about people getting ripped-off as those being ripped-off have more money than sense. 3. Amongst all the overpriced junk some items do give big value for big money (this last point is far from clear though) 4. You spend far too much time reading posts on newsgroups written by borgs. 5. You should return to adult education English expression classes. Kissy Kissy Ayn M PS: On one point I think we'd agree. To achieve decent outcomes in something like analogue engineering processes, such as the design and manufacture of say, a turntable/arm/cartridge that's state of the art, large amounts of money must be spent. |
#3
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![]() Ayn Marx wrote: George M. Middius wrote: Let's start with the obvious. I wish your English expression were more obvious. Wading through the verbiage I think what it is you are trying to say is:- 1. People will always pay for status symbols. 2. It's no use 'borgs' complaining about people getting ripped-off as those being ripped-off have more money than sense. 3. Amongst all the overpriced junk some items do give big value for big money (this last point is far from clear though) 4. You spend far too much time reading posts on newsgroups written by borgs. 5. You should return to adult education English expression classes. Kissy Kissy Ayn M PS: On one point I think we'd agree. To achieve decent outcomes in something like analogue engineering processes, such as the design and manufacture of say, a turntable/arm/cartridge that's state of the art, large amounts of money must be spent. Dear Mr. Marx, English being my second language I'm always eager for instruction. I gather you disapprove of Middius prose. Could you. please, contribute a few of your favourite literary examples of good "Englih expression". Incidentally, I find this use of the noun "expression" somewhat unusual. A few citations supporting your usage would be welcome. Yours, eager to save money on night schooling Ludovic Mirabel |
#4
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... Ayn Marx wrote: George M. Middius wrote: Let's start with the obvious. I wish your English expression were more obvious. Wading through the verbiage I think what it is you are trying to say is:- 1. People will always pay for status symbols. 2. It's no use 'borgs' complaining about people getting ripped-off as those being ripped-off have more money than sense. 3. Amongst all the overpriced junk some items do give big value for big money (this last point is far from clear though) 4. You spend far too much time reading posts on newsgroups written by borgs. 5. You should return to adult education English expression classes. Kissy Kissy Ayn M PS: On one point I think we'd agree. To achieve decent outcomes in something like analogue engineering processes, such as the design and manufacture of say, a turntable/arm/cartridge that's state of the art, large amounts of money must be spent. Dear Mr. Marx, English being my second language I'm always eager for instruction. I gather you disapprove of Middius prose. Could you. please, contribute a few of your favourite literary examples of good "Englih expression". Incidentally, I find this use of the noun "expression" somewhat unusual. A few citations supporting your usage would be welcome. Yours, eager to save money on night schooling Ludovic Mirabel try Ms Marx instead of Mr. Steve |
#5
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![]() Ayn Marx wrote: George M. Middius wrote: snip PS: On one point I think we'd agree. To achieve decent outcomes in something like analogue engineering processes, such as the design and manufacture of say, a turntable/arm/cartridge that's state of the art, large amounts of money must be spent. The engineering per se is not expensive. It has long, long since been reduced to practice, documented, discussed. There is nothing proprietary or radical about it. The best example is the Linn Sondek, essentially a uprated, better made version of the JFK/MM era AR turntable. Any patents ran out decades ago. The price is high because the market is inversely-price-sensitive, the units are built in small quantities, and because there is a fair bit of skilled hand labor involved at Western salaries (though I'd venture to say that if there's a Ferrari in Linn's parking lot it does not belong to any of the assemblers or technicians.) Given a positively-price-sensitive market condition, substantially higher quantities of product (leading to increased automation, design to use more precise techniques on automated bases, etc.) and the use of less expensive assembly labor-although that's a nominal part of the whole package-it is absolutely and conclusively certain that the exact quality of a current Linn table-arm-cartridge combination could be reduced, probably drastically. However, arguably, a small specialist firm like Linn could _then_ build a product yet better than the one they currently do for more money than the mass produced version. There will always be "more", a "higher end". However there have to be objective standards or the "higher end" will be "higher" only in the minds of the buyer, who will be a laughingstock in the eyes of others. |
#6
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![]() "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message oups.com... [snip] Given a positively-price-sensitive market condition, substantially higher quantities of product (leading to increased automation, design to use more precise techniques on automated bases, etc.) and the use of less expensive assembly labor-although that's a nominal part of the whole package-it is absolutely and conclusively certain that the exact quality of a current Linn table-arm-cartridge combination could be reduced, probably drastically. Bret, do you have a German-schtick you feel compelled to adhere to? Why do you force the reader to wade through seven line sentences, with word counts of fifty-one? It is extremely hard to read. I actually read your bloated sentence. It contains interesting thoughts. But you need to cut it into digestible pieces. Let's do that now: "Lowering the price of a high-end product would result in substantially greater sales. Increased automation would allow more precision of assembly, with lower labor cost. I am absolutely positive that the quality of a current Linn table-arm combination could be drastically reduced." As we discover the meaning of this bloated monstrosity, further paraphrase becomes possible: "With the substitution of automation for human skill, assembly of a Linn table-arm combination could be accomplished in a Chinese sweatshop, with drastic reduction in quality." |
#7
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![]() Steve Batt said: try Ms Marx instead of Mr. Or Anonytroll, if you want to be as accurate as possible. |
#8
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![]() "George M. Middius" cmndr [underscore] george [at] comcast [dot] net wrote in message ... Yes, we know marketing talk is largely BS. But it's you 'borgs who can't accept that the same hype happens in audio as in every other luxury category. Really... lets take jewelry. For more money one usually gets either a higher grade, a fancier cut, or simply a bigger diamond. How about cars... one usually gets more horse power and a plethora of useless options. How about fashion... what does one get for big bucks in fashion? Is audio like luxury fashion? No wonder I like hand me downs. ScottW |
#9
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Bret Ludwig wrote:
Ayn Marx wrote: George M. Middius wrote: snip PS: On one point I think we'd agree. To achieve decent outcomes in something like analogue engineering processes, such as the design and manufacture of say, a turntable/arm/cartridge that's state of the art, large amounts of money must be spent. The engineering per se is not expensive. It has long, long since been reduced to practice, documented, discussed. There is nothing proprietary or radical about it. The best example is the Linn Sondek, essentially a uprated, better made version of the JFK/MM era AR turntable. Any patents ran out decades ago. The price is high because the market is inversely-price-sensitive, the units are built in small quantities, and because there is a fair bit of skilled hand labor involved at Western salaries (though I'd venture to say that if there's a Ferrari in Linn's parking lot it does not belong to any of the assemblers or technicians.) Given a positively-price-sensitive market condition, substantially higher quantities of product (leading to increased automation, design to use more precise techniques on automated bases, etc.) and the use of less expensive assembly labor-although that's a nominal part of the whole package-it is absolutely and conclusively certain that the exact quality of a current Linn table-arm-cartridge combination could be reduced, probably drastically. However, arguably, a small specialist firm like Linn could _then_ build a product yet better than the one they currently do for more money than the mass produced version. There will always be "more", a "higher end". However there have to be objective standards or the "higher end" will be "higher" only in the minds of the buyer, who will be a laughingstock in the eyes of others. Translation please in 10 words or less ? |
#10
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![]() "Robert Morein" wrote in message ... "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message oups.com... [snip] Given a positively-price-sensitive market condition, substantially higher quantities of product (leading to increased automation, design to use more precise techniques on automated bases, etc.) and the use of less expensive assembly labor-although that's a nominal part of the whole package-it is absolutely and conclusively certain that the exact quality of a current Linn table-arm-cartridge combination could be reduced, probably drastically. Bret, do you have a German-schtick you feel compelled to adhere to? Why do you force the reader to wade through seven line sentences, with word counts of fifty-one? It is extremely hard to read. I actually read your bloated sentence. It contains interesting thoughts. But you need to cut it into digestible pieces. Let's do that now: "Lowering the price of a high-end product would result in substantially greater sales. Increased automation would allow more precision of assembly, with lower labor cost. I am absolutely positive that the quality of a current Linn table-arm combination could be drastically reduced." As we discover the meaning of this bloated monstrosity, further paraphrase becomes possible: "With the substitution of automation for human skill, assembly of a Linn table-arm combination could be accomplished in a Chinese sweatshop, with drastic reduction in quality." I think he really meant a reduction in cost. Chinese quality varies from the worst in the world to the best. We're now getting mobile KU-band satellite transceivers out of Chinese factories of equal or better quality than our US factory. National Semiconductor's president recently went on a rant in Electronic News about US manufacturing and pointed out that the perception of the Chinese sweatshop is flat out wrong in todays day and age. If you want to see the worlds most advanced state of the art manufacturing ("dark" factories, so fully automated that no lighting is needed for human operators) you have to go to China to see it. ScottW |
#11
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![]() "ScottW" wrote in message news:Gu3Ze.121097$Ep.6930@lakeread02... "Robert Morein" wrote in message ... "Bret Ludwig" wrote in message oups.com... [snip] Given a positively-price-sensitive market condition, substantially higher quantities of product (leading to increased automation, design to use more precise techniques on automated bases, etc.) and the use of less expensive assembly labor-although that's a nominal part of the whole package-it is absolutely and conclusively certain that the exact quality of a current Linn table-arm-cartridge combination could be reduced, probably drastically. Bret, do you have a German-schtick you feel compelled to adhere to? Why do you force the reader to wade through seven line sentences, with word counts of fifty-one? It is extremely hard to read. I actually read your bloated sentence. It contains interesting thoughts. But you need to cut it into digestible pieces. Let's do that now: "Lowering the price of a high-end product would result in substantially greater sales. Increased automation would allow more precision of assembly, with lower labor cost. I am absolutely positive that the quality of a current Linn table-arm combination could be drastically reduced." As we discover the meaning of this bloated monstrosity, further paraphrase becomes possible: "With the substitution of automation for human skill, assembly of a Linn table-arm combination could be accomplished in a Chinese sweatshop, with drastic reduction in quality." I think he really meant a reduction in cost. Chinese quality varies from the worst in the world to the best. We're now getting mobile KU-band satellite transceivers out of Chinese factories of equal or better quality than our US factory. National Semiconductor's president recently went on a rant in Electronic News about US manufacturing and pointed out that the perception of the Chinese sweatshop is flat out wrong in todays day and age. If you want to see the worlds most advanced state of the art manufacturing ("dark" factories, so fully automated that no lighting is needed for human operators) you have to go to China to see it. ScottW Scott, you're right, of course. I made the reference as an element of sarcasm. Chinese manufacturing technology is scarily good, a challenge to the future of our nation, a challenge I think we will lose. |
#12
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![]() "George M. Middius" cmndr [underscore] george [at] comcast [dot] net wrote in message ... Let's start with the obvious. Consumer audio is rife with high-priced stuff. A lot of it is "overpriced" if you define that to mean "priced out of proportion to its utility", where the baseline for value is set by the lowest-priced stuff. Now we've established that simple fact, let's get to what's wrong with you 'borgs. Of course you can't afford the expensive stuff. How many of them have you met? Neither can most people. Guess what? $10,000 amps and $30,000 speakers aren't marketed to the likes of you. So therefor we have no right to assess their value as equipment or to determine if they do ANYTHING different than cost more? You don't want that stuff and the people who sell it don't want you as customers. (It's true you don't want it, right?) I don't want tobe patronized and lied to about how much better my better my system will sound if I buy $100.00 per ft, cable. I don't want some ignorant schlub to try and convince me that things that aren't capable of happening are possible with the newest tweak. We know you can't afford it. Tough. Irrelevant to the stuff being as advertised. We also know you don't understand the luxury goods market. When you buy something considered a luxury, it has things that can objectively be considered better than the plain vanilla version. A more comfortable chair, a longer lasting engine, whatever, it means improvement other than cosmetic. All you understand about value is how much something costs. The people who engineer and record music want and expect that their work will be given the courtesy of playback on equipment that will accurately reproduce it. To that end, audiophiles try to get equipment that doesn't audibly distort. Once you have a device that achieves that end, anything more is not luxury, it's window drressing. While some may think it nice to have gear that looks as good as it sounds, for most of us the sound comes first. All your bleating about "tests" and "proof" and "claims" is a smokescreen. Yes, we know marketing talk is largely BS. But it's you 'borgs who can't accept that the same hype happens in audio as in every other luxury category. Which other luxury categories market things that can't do what they are claimed to be able to do? Best Buy, as an example, sells hundreds of low-priced boxes out of each store each week. A high-end salon sells a few boxes each week. "Amps is amps!" shriek the 'borgs. Then how do you explain the fact that high-end salons have a steady stream of customers, many of them repeat customers? "Ripoff!" intone the 'borgs, showing their abysmal ignorance. And the evidence to the contrary is where? Aside from the possiblity of better quality speakers, what besides the better digs is there to recomend? You 'borgs don't get it. You're clueless. You're completely lost. You believe with all your metronic hearts that audio should be utilitarian. Bull****, we beleive it should do what it advertises it can do. If it can't do that they shouldn't claim it does. If it can, it's worth then becomes something to consider. Well, guess what -- it's not. As long as there's a segment of the market that will pay for fancy nameplates and toadying service, some suppliers will go into business to satisfy that demand. Nothing wrong with excellent coustomer service, it's the bull**** advertising that's the problem and the belief that things that cost more sound better when they only look better. Most people are smart enough to know that if they buy expensive cologne, it doesn't mean they get to sleep with a supermodel. If audio companies want to adverstise sex appeal as a reason to buy their stuff so what? When they say it sounds better or different, then they ought to be willing and able to demonstrate it. The high end is not for you. The high end is almost completely the province of loudspeaker design, since (assuming sound quality is the main goal), so any other claims aobut high end are really confined to looks and features. I don't know anybody who thinks you shouldn't be able to spend asa much as you want on your stereo, but you should be aware, and lots of people seem not to be, that it doesn't buy better performance. Turn around and go shop where you're wanted. So the audio salons should maybe put up signs: NO TECHNICALLY COMPETENT PEOPLE ALLOWED? **** you, snob. |
#13
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George M. Middius a écrit :
Let's start with the obvious. Consumer audio is rife with high-priced stuff. A lot of it is "overpriced" if you define that to mean "priced out of proportion to its utility", where the baseline for value is set by the lowest-priced stuff. Now we've established that simple fact, let's get to what's wrong with you 'borgs. Of course you can't afford the expensive stuff. Neither can most people. Guess what? $10,000 amps and $30,000 speakers aren't marketed to the likes of you. You don't want that stuff and the people who sell it don't want you as customers. (It's true you don't want it, right?) We know you can't afford it. Tough. We also know you don't understand the luxury goods market. All you understand about value is how much something costs. All your bleating about "tests" and "proof" and "claims" is a smokescreen. Yes, we know marketing talk is largely BS. But it's you 'borgs who can't accept that the same hype happens in audio as in every other luxury category. Best Buy, as an example, sells hundreds of low-priced boxes out of each store each week. A high-end salon sells a few boxes each week. "Amps is amps!" shriek the 'borgs. Then how do you explain the fact that high-end salons have a steady stream of customers, many of them repeat customers? "Ripoff!" intone the 'borgs, showing their abysmal ignorance. You 'borgs don't get it. You're clueless. You're completely lost. You believe with all your metronic hearts that audio should be utilitarian. Well, guess what -- it's not. As long as there's a segment of the market that will pay for fancy nameplates and toadying service, some suppliers will go into business to satisfy that demand. The high end is not for you. Turn around and go shop where you're wanted. George you have already written that more than 1,000 times on RAO. Why don't you try to be a little bit more imaginative ? Now you just look like these old pop-stars who endlessly try to recycle the gimmicks which have brought them a little success long time ago. Pathetic no ? I suggest you to stop posting on RAO during a few years and to profit of this retirement to feed your indigent thought. I'm sure that this is necessary in order for the "Normals" to recover their hero and to make you the triumph that you deserve. All my best... |
#14
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#16
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#17
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... Ayn Marx wrote: George M. Middius wrote: Let's start with the obvious. I wish your English expression were more obvious. Wading through the verbiage I think what it is you are trying to say is:- 1. People will always pay for status symbols. 2. It's no use 'borgs' complaining about people getting ripped-off as those being ripped-off have more money than sense. 3. Amongst all the overpriced junk some items do give big value for big money (this last point is far from clear though) 4. You spend far too much time reading posts on newsgroups written by borgs. 5. You should return to adult education English expression classes. Kissy Kissy Ayn M PS: On one point I think we'd agree. To achieve decent outcomes in something like analogue engineering processes, such as the design and manufacture of say, a turntable/arm/cartridge that's state of the art, large amounts of money must be spent. Dear Mr. Marx, English being my second language I'm always eager for instruction. I gather you disapprove of Middius prose. Could you. please, contribute a few of your favourite literary examples of good "Englih expression". Incidentally, I find this use of the noun "expression" somewhat unusual. A few citations supporting your usage would be welcome. Yours, eager to save money on night schooling Ludovic Mirabel Just ignore her as she is a stupid posturing old woman who should know better. |
#18
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#19
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| Neither can most
| people. Guess what? $10,000 amps and $30,000 speakers aren't marketed to | the likes of you. | | So therefor we have no right to assess their value as equipment or to | determine if they do ANYTHING different than cost more? I think what the original ****tard poster doesn't get, is that its the people he refers to as 'borgs' who delelop, manufacture, and repair the stuff in the first place. Its some bull**** corporate unit and some bull**** deluded retailer who crank the price up to make 1000%+ profit. I am not saying a $10000 amp is equal to some dodgey $80 jobbo, but no human senses could tell the differnece between a $1500 amp and a $10000 amp, especially when they all use the same made-in-korea semiconductors within. |
#20
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and build your own high-end stuff. You can build amps for about 10% of the
cost of the crap you find in shops. Doug |
#21
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![]() Bret Ludwig wrote: PS: On one point I think we'd agree. To achieve decent outcomes in something like analogue engineering processes, such as the design and manufacture of say, a turntable/arm/cartridge that's state of the art, large amounts of money must be spent. The engineering per se is not expensive. It has long, long since been reduced to practice, documented, discussed. There is nothing proprietary or radical about it. The best example is the Linn Sondek, essentially a uprated, better made version of the JFK/MM era AR turntable. Any patents ran out decades ago. If you are implying here that Linn's turntables are still state of the art I'd suggest you are behind the times. |
#22
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![]() Yapper barked: Yes, we know marketing talk is largely BS. But it's you 'borgs who can't accept that the same hype happens in audio as in every other luxury category. Really... lets[sic] take jewelry. For more money one usually gets either a higher grade, a fancier cut, or simply a bigger diamond. What's your dorkiness rating today, Scottie? I'm betting you've experienced a surge recently. I'll observe in passing that your analogy is inapt. I won't dwell on how stupid a person would have to be not to see that. Bye. |
#23
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![]() SmakDaddy said: I think what the original ****tard blush poster doesn't get, is that its the people he refers to as 'borgs' who delelop, manufacture, and repair the stuff in the first place. Oopsie. Your cluelessness runneth over. You don't know what 'borgs are. You just do not know anything. Now hush up and go choke your chicken some more. |
#24
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![]() Fred At Home said: "English Expression" was in common usage about 50 years ago. Now we got rap myoozik. So much better! |
#25
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On Fri, 23 Sep 2005 19:57:15 -0700, "ScottW"
wrote: "George M. Middius" cmndr [underscore] george [at] comcast [dot] net wrote in message ... Yes, we know marketing talk is largely BS. But it's you 'borgs who can't accept that the same hype happens in audio as in every other luxury category. Really... lets take jewelry. For more money one usually gets either a higher grade, a fancier cut, or simply a bigger diamond. Usually they get a "better name". Like Tiffany. How about cars... one usually gets more horse power and a plethora of useless options. Or a "fancier name". Like Eddie Bauer. How about fashion... what does one get for big bucks in fashion? A "big name". Like Gauthier. Is audio like luxury fashion? No wonder I like hand me downs. Naw, you've just got a Goodwill mentality in a 6 figure income. |
#26
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| You don't know what 'borgs are. You just do not know anything.
Wrong again, little one Heres a little secret just for you - I dont care what you think about anything. from Smak ![]() |
#27
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On Sat, 24 Sep 2005 08:26:51 GMT, "Doug Flynn"
wrote: and build your own high-end stuff. You can build amps for about 10% of the cost of the crap you find in shops. Doug Yes. Only to have it go bang in your face. |
#28
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![]() SmakDaddy said: You don't know what 'borgs are. You just do not know anything. Wrong again, little one Stop lying. You said: people he refers to as 'borgs' who delelop[sic], manufacture, and repair the stuff in the first place. This shows your ignorance. 'Borgs do none of those things. If they did, they would not be 'borgs. You so stupid, yo' mama filed to get your genome reassembled. Also, fix your newsreader, imbecile. |
#29
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![]() "SmakDaddy" wrote in message ... | Neither can most | people. Guess what? $10,000 amps and $30,000 speakers aren't marketed to | the likes of you. | | So therefor we have no right to assess their value as equipment or to | determine if they do ANYTHING different than cost more? I think what the original ****tard poster doesn't get, is that its the people he refers to as 'borgs' who delelop, manufacture, and repair the stuff in the first place. Its some bull**** corporate unit and some bull**** deluded retailer who crank the price up to make 1000%+ profit. I am not saying a $10000 amp is equal to some dodgey $80 jobbo, but no human senses could tell the differnece between a $1500 amp and a $10000 amp, especially when they all use the same made-in-korea semiconductors within. 1000% is an exaggeration of an unfortunate situation. But the argument that the country of origin for semiconductors makes diverse amplifiers equal is a bad one. Amplifiers vary widely in sound, but not necessarily on the basis of price. I find that MOSFETs sound different from bipolars, and IGFETs. The way MOSFETs are driven is yet a further division. And high bias bipolar amps sound different from low bias designs. So, I take it, to you, a Halcro sounds the same as a Parasound? The "borgs" are not the makers. The "borgs" are users, not of equipment, but of other human beings. |
#30
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"Bret Ludwig" said:
(though I'd venture to say that if there's a Ferrari in Linn's parking lot it does not belong to any of the assemblers or technicians.) There are no Ferraris in Linn's parking lot (The Aston belongs to Ivor) . -- "Audio as a serious hobby is going down the tubes." - Howard Ferstler, 25/4/2005 |
#31
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![]() "paul packer" wrote in message ... On Sat, 24 Sep 2005 08:26:51 GMT, "Doug Flynn" wrote: and build your own high-end stuff. You can build amps for about 10% of the cost of the crap you find in shops. Doug Yes. Only to have it go bang in your face. No necessarily. I've built plenty of SS amplifiers including pre-amps and power amps to in excess of 300W RMS per channel with no problems. Sure in a lot of cases you can save money by DYI but I doubt it would be as high as 90% unless the manufactured amplifier is way over the top in the rip-off stakes. A decent solid case (chassis), heatsinks and a capable power supply are generally the expensive parts in a high powered amplifier unless you are using particularly exotic or expensive semiconductors. I haven't built any valve gear in years, but gauging on the costs of valves and no readily available off the shelf components (output and power transformers, smoothing chokes, etc) I suspect a valve project is a somewhat expensive one? Cheers, Alan |
#32
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![]() Alan Rutlidge wrote: "paul packer" wrote in message ... On Sat, 24 Sep 2005 08:26:51 GMT, "Doug Flynn" wrote: and build your own high-end stuff. You can build amps for about 10% of the cost of the crap you find in shops. Doug Yes. Only to have it go bang in your face. No necessarily. I've built plenty of SS amplifiers including pre-amps and power amps to in excess of 300W RMS per channel with no problems. Sure in a lot of cases you can save money by DYI but I doubt it would be as high as 90% unless the manufactured amplifier is way over the top in the rip-off stakes. A decent solid case (chassis), heatsinks and a capable power supply are generally the expensive parts in a high powered amplifier unless you are using particularly exotic or expensive semiconductors. I haven't built any valve gear in years, but gauging on the costs of valves and no readily available off the shelf components (output and power transformers, smoothing chokes, etc) I suspect a valve project is a somewhat expensive one? Cheers, Alan The cost of the labour intensive output transformers and strong chassis required to support the transformers will always make building a tube amp far more expensive $$per watt project than any SS design. But DIYers are never solely cost conscious ppl. For a variety of other reasons tube amps are a DIYer's delight to build and listen to. But very few DIYers wind their own transformers and chokes. One hasn't really built a tube amp unless one has wound all the trannies though..... Patrick Turner. |
#34
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![]() wrote in message ups.com... P.S. While we're at it could you give me a good English expression to match "hutzpah"? Lionel, insisting, that the only proper spelling is "Chutzpah". Not that Chutzpah is even an English word Not that Lionel can even write proper simple English |
#35
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![]() "dave weil" wrote in message ... On Fri, 23 Sep 2005 19:57:15 -0700, "ScottW" wrote: "George M. Middius" cmndr [underscore] george [at] comcast [dot] net wrote in message ... Yes, we know marketing talk is largely BS. But it's you 'borgs who can't accept that the same hype happens in audio as in every other luxury category. Really... lets take jewelry. For more money one usually gets either a higher grade, a fancier cut, or simply a bigger diamond. Usually they get a "better name". Like Tiffany. How about cars... one usually gets more horse power and a plethora of useless options. Or a "fancier name". Like Eddie Bauer. Which happens to come with a specific option package. How about fashion... what does one get for big bucks in fashion? A "big name". Like Gauthier. Too bad the big audio names seem to come into and out of fashion with the whims of reviewers, the budgets of advertisement, or the addition of, "gasp", a consumer retail outlet. Is audio like luxury fashion? No wonder I like hand me downs. Naw, you've just got a Goodwill mentality in a 6 figure income. Yes, I am blessed and must have sympathy for those suffering the internal conflicts and insecurities brought by longings of luxury with never a hope (save the lotto) of acquiring. ScottW |
#36
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"ScottW" said:
Too bad the big audio names seem to come into and out of fashion with the whims of reviewers, the budgets of advertisement, or the addition of, "gasp", a consumer retail outlet. Please note that second-hand quality audio gear seems to hold up its value pretty well. A used Krell, Mark Levinson, Rowland, Audio Research, yes even Quad or Radford can't be had for a bargain. -- "Audio as a serious hobby is going down the tubes." - Howard Ferstler, 25/4/2005 |
#37
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![]() "Robert Morein" wrote in message ... "SmakDaddy" wrote in message ... | Neither can most | people. Guess what? $10,000 amps and $30,000 speakers aren't marketed to | the likes of you. | | So therefor we have no right to assess their value as equipment or to | determine if they do ANYTHING different than cost more? I think what the original ****tard poster doesn't get, is that its the people he refers to as 'borgs' who delelop, manufacture, and repair the stuff in the first place. Its some bull**** corporate unit and some bull**** deluded retailer who crank the price up to make 1000%+ profit. I am not saying a $10000 amp is equal to some dodgey $80 jobbo, but no human senses could tell the differnece between a $1500 amp and a $10000 amp, especially when they all use the same made-in-korea semiconductors within. 1000% is an exaggeration of an unfortunate situation. But the argument that the country of origin for semiconductors makes diverse amplifiers equal is a bad one. Amplifiers vary widely in sound, but not necessarily on the basis of price. And your evidence of this is where? I find that MOSFETs sound different from bipolars, and IGFETs. But only in sighted listening so the comment ios useless. The way MOSFETs are driven is yet a further division. Another worthless anecdote. And high bias bipolar amps sound different from low bias designs. More unscientific crapola. So, I take it, to you, a Halcro sounds the same as a Parasound? You have a DBT that shows otherwise? The "borgs" are not the makers. The "borgs" are users, not of equipment, but of other human beings. More nonsense. The ones being called Borgs by ididots like Middius and you are the people who understand that measurements have actual meanbing and that when two devices meansure similarly enough, they sound the same. |
#38
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![]() "Doug Flynn" wrote in message ... and build your own high-end stuff. You can build amps for about 10% of the cost of the crap you find in shops. Doug 10%! Not likely. If you choose to not use the overweight faceplates and such, you can save money, but the components themselves are more expensive for the DIYer than for the mass producer. There are some DIY groups that pool their money to get better pricing on projects they have interest in, but overall you can't build an amp or preamp for substantially less than a competently designed one that's mass produced. Naturally they will sound indistinguishable from each other, again assuming competent design. |
#39
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![]() "Sander deWaal" wrote in message news ![]() "ScottW" said: Too bad the big audio names seem to come into and out of fashion with the whims of reviewers, the budgets of advertisement, or the addition of, "gasp", a consumer retail outlet. Please note that second-hand quality audio gear seems to hold up its value pretty well. A used Krell, Mark Levinson, Rowland, Audio Research, yes even Quad or Radford can't be had for a bargain. But products from lesser known names that soound identical can be. |
#40
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![]() "Ayn Marx" wrote in message oups.com... Bret Ludwig wrote: PS: On one point I think we'd agree. To achieve decent outcomes in something like analogue engineering processes, such as the design and manufacture of say, a turntable/arm/cartridge that's state of the art, large amounts of money must be spent. The engineering per se is not expensive. It has long, long since been reduced to practice, documented, discussed. There is nothing proprietary or radical about it. The best example is the Linn Sondek, essentially a uprated, better made version of the JFK/MM era AR turntable. Any patents ran out decades ago. If you are implying here that Linn's turntables are still state of the art I'd suggest you are behind the times. Isn't state of the art and turntable an oxymoron? |
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