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So one could say, it seems to me, as an equally simple explanation, that if the test shows "no difference" between dozens of components widely considered to "sound different" by hundreds or thousands of audiophiles, dealers, and reviewers, that the test simply somehow has a fatal flaw and doesn't measure what it purports to measure. The operative term is 'considered'. Which does neither suggest nor imply 'prove'. Again, if we are delving within the realm of 'consideration', then we are discussing religion. That is all well and good, but true-believers of any stripe will not be convinced by 'considerations' (and sometimes not even by irrefutable proof). Peter Wieck Wyncote, PA Absolutely agree. Just because a number of reviewers find in favour of a product could be no more than that they have been "encouraged" by the manufacturer to think so. Reviewers are employed by magazines to find differences - whether these differences exist is irrelevant. When did you last read a review to the effects that this amp/CDplayer/preamp sound the same as any other? S. |
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