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#1
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http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4007866/
"DVD-Audio and SACD fail to impress electronics consumers" "The appeal to consumers was supposed to be better and more lifelike sound quality. The appeal to music companies was supposed to be a new digital format that consumers couldn't Napster-ize or cheaply copy so it could be sent across the Internet to all their friends." Of course this is all ********. Not only didn't the new formats necessarily sound better, in scientific tests they repeatedly failed to sound any different. Furthermore, nothing technically inhibits napsterizing music recorded on in the new DVD-A or SACD but larger file sizes. "But instead, two newish audio media formats, DVD-Audio and SACD (short for "super audio compact disc"), seem to be stuck at the starting gate. Rather than replacing the enormously successful CD, these two formats are starting to look like two Next Big Things that may never find a place in tomorrow's all-digital, relentlessly networked living room." No doubt an allusion to the fact that all DVD-A and SACD players lack industry-standard digital interfaces that can work with existing high-sample-rate, high resolution equipment. Now here is the really damning part of the story: "During the six-month period ending in June 2003, only 100,000 DVD-Audio discs were sold, compared with 245 million CDs, the Recording Industry Association of America reports. Even traditional vinyl records outsold DVD-Audio -- by a factor of six to one" Which begs the question, when these formats will be abandoned by increasingly cost-conscious corporate supporters? |
#2
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"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
With line breaks put back in... how did that happen? http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/4007866/ "DVD-Audio and SACD fail to impress electronics consumers" "The appeal to consumers was supposed to be better and more lifelike sound quality. The appeal to music companies was supposed to be a new digital format that consumers couldn't Napster-ize or cheaply copy so it could be sent across the Internet to all their friends." Of course this is all ********. Not only didn't the new formats necessarily sound better, in scientific tests they repeatedly failed to sound any different. Furthermore, nothing technically inhibits napsterizing music recorded on in the new DVD-A or SACD but larger file sizes. "But instead, two newish audio media formats, DVD-Audio and SACD (short for "super audio compact disc"), seem to be stuck at the starting gate. Rather than replacing the enormously successful CD, these two formats are starting to look like two Next Big Things that may never find a place in tomorrow's all-digital, relentlessly networked living room." No doubt an allusion to the fact that all DVD-A and SACD players lack industry-standard digital interfaces that can work with existing high-sample-rate, high resolution equipment. Now here is the really damning part of the story: "During the six-month period ending in June 2003, only 100,000 DVD-Audio discs were sold, compared with 245 million CDs, the Recording Industry Association of America reports. Even traditional vinyl records outsold DVD-Audio -- by a factor of six to one" Which begs the question, when these formats will be abandoned by increasingly cost-conscious corporate supporters? |
#3
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"François Yves Le Gal" wrote in message
On Wed, 21 Jan 2004 05:36:36 -0500, "Arny Krueger" wrote: Of course this is all ********. Not only didn't the new formats necessarily sound better, in scientific tests they repeatedly failed to sound any different. Care to back yet another outrageous allegation with some facts for a change, Mr. Krüger? Asked and answered, many, many times. It's really simple François. You, someone, or the recording industry needs to deliver for free public audition, a regular high-bitrate music recording, one that people in general reliably identify as sounding different from the same recording downsampled to CD format, in some kind of level-matched, time-synched, bias-controlled listening test. Just one such recording will make things really interesting. Right now, zero such recordings are known to exist. In contrast, many counter-examples are known to exist. I've personally given away thousands of them. So have others. That's not how we planned it, but that's how it happens. Now here is the really damning part of the story: "During the six-month period ending in June 2003, only 100,000 DVD-Audio discs were sold, compared with 245 million CDs, the Recording Industry Association of America reports. Even traditional vinyl records outsold DVD-Audio -- by a factor of six to one" Damning? Nope. Yep. We should recall that about a year ago Warner Brothers management announced a far-reaching project to convert much of their legacy library to DVD-A. http://www.hometheatermag.com/bootcamp/152/ Towards the end of the same year we hear about Warner Music being unloaded: http://www.iht.com/articles/119053.html Thank you for confirming that vinyl is alive and doing well! It's a niche product, most of which ends up helping people dance. We're not talking about serious listening, here. I wouldn't call less than 1% of its former market share "alive and well". BTW, the same "article" states that the "The [Rolling Stones SA-CD] reissues sold about 2 million copies". Hmmm. One series of reissues on SA-CD selling twenty times more than all DVD-A's combined. The key here is that the SACD re-issues were fully audio CD player compatible. Ironically, even though they are DVDs, they don't actually exploit any of the enhanced features of virtually all DVD players now in existence. Oh, and a single European pressing plant, Sonopress in Gütersloh (DE), produces 800 000 SA-CDs per month. 2002 stats show 800 million audio CDs sold per year, or about 70 million per month. 800,000 SACDs per month amount to about 1.4 % of that. Since most or all of them are compatible with regular audio CD players, it's highly dangerous to presume that any number of their high-resolution layers are actively being played. |
#4
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On Wed, 21 Jan 2004 15:25:49 +0100, François Yves Le Gal
wrote: 2002 stats show 800 million audio CDs sold per year, or about 70 million per month. 800,000 SACDs per month amount to about 1.4 % of that. Fallacious argument, at best. The figure is for *ONE* pressing plant, you compare it to global stats for all CD manufacturing plants. That wasn't the only one. He tried to imply linkage between the archiving of material at Warner on a "hi-rez" format with their purchase by another group of investors. |
#5
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"François Yves Le Gal" wrote in message
On Wed, 21 Jan 2004 08:44:39 -0500, "Arny Krueger" wrote: Care to back yet another outrageous allegation with some facts for a change, Mr. Krüger? Asked and answered, many, many times. It's really simple François. Yes, it's really simple: you can't back your outrageous allegation except by repeating the same mantra again and again. The so-called mantra is "show me the beef". I've been asking this question for years, and by implication so have the consumers. No beef, no joy. Thank you for confirming that vinyl is alive and doing well! It's a niche product, most of which ends up helping people dance. We're not talking about serious listening, here. Well, Lee Gomes of the Wall Street Journal begs to disagree with you (as do every sane music lover on this planet, but that's another story): "By now, I was having the "Am I on the same planet?" feeling one often gets around physicists or wine buffs. I had encoded these MP3s myself, from my own CDs, at high bit rates for maximum quality. To my ears, the music was paralyzingly beautiful. I frankly didn't understand what the problem was. Sensing my confusion, Mr. Kuzma offered to help. He would play, on his turntable, Dave Brubeck's "Take Five," a song I also had on my iPod, and we could compare the two. From my iPod, the music certainly sounded OK, but it seemed to live in a box that was a few feet wide and a few inches deep. With the LP, though, the sounds became three-dimensional, each of them inhabiting what seemed, with my eyes closed, to be a big, throbbing sphere. Wow this is an amazingly fair comparison. Listening to an iPod over headphones and listening to a LP over speakers. All relevant variables other than the MP3 coding have been held constant, eh? And, if you expect us to believe these ******** your name must be "François Yves Le Gal" "Can you hear how, on the MP3, it sounds like the music has a blanket over it?" Mr. Kuzma asked. Yes, indeed, I could." Obviously the comparison involved many relevant variables, while the results were ascribed to just one of them. Bad science or what? From the WSJ, Jan 19th edition. As their on-line content is reserved to their subscribers, he's a link to a recent rahe article publishing the article in full: One reason why Scientific American didn't close their doors when the WSJ opened theirs... The key here ... Is that SA-CD's sell in millions, something you refuse to acknowledge, resorting to your usual obfuscating tactics. Oh, and a single European pressing plant, Sonopress in Gütersloh (DE), produces 800 000 SA-CDs per month. 2002 stats show 800 million audio CDs sold per year, or about 70 million per month. 800,000 SACDs per month amount to about 1.4 % of that. Fallacious argument, at best. The figure is for *ONE* pressing plant, you compare it to global stats for all CD manufacturing plants. Look François you get to cite any statistics you have. When you've got something better to share, be sure to do so. Anyway, SA-CD is still a high end system, not a mass market one. You can't expect to see today the same volumes as CD. Never said I did. However, it's been 3 years or more since the introduction of SACD. It obviously hasn't taken the world by storm like the original DVD-video did. Something about the difference in perceived benefits, I'd say. |
#6
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It's really simple François. You,
someone, or the recording industry needs to deliver for free public audition, a regular high-bitrate music recording, one that people in general reliably identify as sounding different from the same recording downsampled to CD format, in some kind of level-matched, time-synched, bias-controlled listening test. Just one such recording will make things really interesting. Interesting to a group of about 20 people. A far larger number of people have already expressed a preference for SACDs based on informal, uncontroled comparisons. Whether or not you like it, that is good enough for most consumers. I haven't really been following the format wars of late but I would suspect that it will take inexpensive portable players and autochangers for the car for SACD or DVD audio to take off. That is what it took for CDs to take off. It is what the average consumer really wants. Convenience and portability. The fact is most consumers are quite satisfied with MP3. mOst casual music listeners are not audiophiles. It is a niche market and always has been. |
#7
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![]() The so-called mantra is "show me the beef". I've been asking this question for years, and by implication so have the consumers. No beef, no joy. It is "show me the money." Or it is "where's the beef?" |
#8
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"S888Wheel" wrote in message
It's really simple François. You, someone, or the recording industry needs to deliver for free public audition, a regular high-bitrate music recording, one that people in general reliably identify as sounding different from the same recording downsampled to CD format, in some kind of level-matched, time-synched, bias-controlled listening test. Just one such recording will make things really interesting. Interesting to a group of about 20 people. A far larger number of people have already expressed a preference for SACDs based on informal, uncontroled comparisons. Whether or not you like it, that is good enough for most consumers. Which is why we have influential national publications publishing articles entitled: "DVD-Audio and SACD fail to impress electronics consumers" It's all that pent-up consumer interest in DVD-A and SACD that stimulated the author to write, and the editor to publish such an article. I haven't really been following the format wars of late but I would suspect that it will take inexpensive portable players and autochangers for the car for SACD or DVD audio to take off. Consumer interest has nothing to do with it, right? That is what it took for CDs to take off. No it isn't. And it isn't what it took for DVD-V to take off. The autochanger thing has to be one of the worst red herrings in recent RAO history,and that's saying quite a bit. Why do you need a changer with media that already plays for a couple of hours from a single disc? The answer is that you don't. And you said autochangers for the car? That's totally unreal. It is what the average consumer really wants. Convenience and portability. Well, compared to what? The pre-existing format for DVD-V was VHS tape, which was already reasonably convenient. Ironically, DVD-V's popularity was based on picture and sound quality. It wasn't true for the CD which took maybe a decade for player prices to come down to those of the average turntable, and for which it took years and years for portable players including auto players to become popular. It wasn't true for the DVD which took off while DVD player prices were substantially higher than average CD and VHS player prices, and when there really was no such thing as a viable portable player that sold in any kind of serious volume. The fact is most consumers are quite satisfied with MP3. Now finally sockpuppet, you say something that makes a little sense. Most casual music listeners are not audiophiles. It is a niche market and always has been. Problem is, the audiophile market is too tiny of a niche to support two formats that could only possibly be interesting to audiophiles. SACD and DVD-A could be interesting formats if they actually sounded better, but of course they don't. With DVD-A and SACD you've got two solutions looking for a problem that neither of them adequately solves, duking it out in a niche marketplace. Be still my heart! |
#9
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Arny said
It's really simple François. You, someone, or the recording industry needs to deliver for free public audition, a regular high-bitrate music recording, one that people in general reliably identify as sounding different from the same recording downsampled to CD format, in some kind of level-matched, time-synched, bias-controlled listening test. Just one such recording will make things really interesting. I said Interesting to a group of about 20 people. A far larger number of people have already expressed a preference for SACDs based on informal, uncontroled comparisons. Whether or not you like it, that is good enough for most consumers. Arny said Which is why we have influential national publications publishing articles entitled: "DVD-Audio and SACD fail to impress electronics consumers" I addressed that issue later on in my post. Most consumers are interested in convenience and portability not sound quality. So yeah, DVD Audio and SACD are not likely to impress electronic consumers. They offer no advantage in convenience or portability. They are clearly aimed at a small niche market. Arny said It's all that pent-up consumer interest in DVD-A and SACD that stimulated the author to write, and the editor to publish such an article. What are you trying to say? I said I haven't really been following the format wars of late but I would suspect that it will take inexpensive portable players and autochangers for the car for SACD or DVD audio to take off. Arny said Consumer interest has nothing to do with it, right? It has everything to do with it. Most *consumers* are *interested* in formats that maximize convenience and portability. CD is still way ahead in those respects. I said That is what it took for CDs to take off. Arny said No it isn't. Yes it is. Arny said And it isn't what it took for DVD-V to take off. I didn't say it was.You are comparing apples to oranges. People are used to watching video at home so it should be no surprise that DVDs were able to do well before they became so portable. But the fact is they are quite convenient and quite portable. I am confident that this has helped the success of that medium. Arny said The autochanger thing has to be one of the worst red herrings in recent RAO history,and that's saying quite a bit. Why do you need a changer with media that already plays for a couple of hours from a single disc? Because commercial discs rarely have a couple hours of material on them. Arny said The answer is that you don't. Wrong answer. Arny said And you said autochangers for the car? That's totally unreal. Hardly. But certainly CD players for the car were a major factor for the success of CDs even before autochangers were available. Convenience and portability. I said It is what the average consumer really wants. Convenience and portability. Arny said Well, compared to what? Inconvenience and nonportability. Arny said The pre-existing format for DVD-V was VHS tape, which was already reasonably convenient. Which has what to do with the topic of DVD Audio and SACD? Arny said Ironically, DVD-V's popularity was based on picture and sound quality. I would say there were other factors. Laser Disc already had VHS clearly beat in quality and that format has died. Arny said It wasn't true for the CD which took maybe a decade for player prices to come down to those of the average turntable, No. They were available pretty much right away. Arny said and for which it took years and years for portable players including auto players to become popular. No. It took a few years for them to become avialable. As soon as they were affordable to the average consumer they took off in popularity. Coincidentally (not really a coincidence IMO) that was when the CD format took off as well. Arny said It wasn't true for the DVD which took off while DVD player prices were substantially higher than average CD and VHS player prices, and when there really was no such thing as a viable portable player that sold in any kind of serious volume. Which still has nothing to do with DVD Audio or SACD. Yeah, DVD came around at a good time when home theater became interesting to more consumers. I said The fact is most consumers are quite satisfied with MP3. Arny said Now finally sockpuppet, you say something that makes a little sense. Everything I said has made sense whether you agree with it or not. I said Most casual music listeners are not audiophiles. It is a niche market and always has been. Arny said Problem is, the audiophile market is too tiny of a niche to support two formats that could only possibly be interesting to audiophiles. SACD and DVD-A could be interesting formats if they actually sounded better, but of course they don't. It may be true that the market is too small to support all the formats. That has nothing to do with whether or not they offer any improvement in performance. If consumers believe they offer an improvement it doesn't matter if a handful of people disagree. Audiophiles have been raving about the improvements they hear from both new formats. Whether or not that is from a real difference in the formats themselves or a difference in the mastering of the titles or even an imagined difference it is of no consequence to the sales of titles in these formats. The perception is what matters. Arny said With DVD-A and SACD you've got two solutions looking for a problem that neither of them adequately solves, duking it out in a niche marketplace. Be still my heart! Yours is only one opinion. You may be right though that the audiophile market may simply be too small to support the formats. Time will tell. It doesn't seem to take a large market to support the audio vinyl niche. That is still enjoying a substantial reniassance much to my delight. |
#10
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Oh No!
Run away! The Holy Wars of Audio have restarted! |
#11
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![]() "S888Wheel" wrote in message ... It's really simple François. You, someone, or the recording industry needs to deliver for free public audition, a regular high-bitrate music recording, one that people in general reliably identify as sounding different from the same recording downsampled to CD format, in some kind of level-matched, time-synched, bias-controlled listening test. Just one such recording will make things really interesting. Interesting to a group of about 20 people. A far larger number of people have already expressed a preference for SACDs based on informal, uncontroled comparisons. Which are therefore meaningless. Whether or not you like it, that is good enough for most consumers. Other than when the music is mixed for surround sound, I can't tell any difference between SACD and CD. I haven't really been following the format wars of late but I would suspect that it will take inexpensive portable players and autochangers for the car for SACD or DVD audio to take off. That is what it took for CDs to take off. The format took off therefore there were inexpensive portable players, not the other way round. It is what the average consumer really wants. Convenience and portability. CD's took off because they sound better and they take up less space than an LP. Mostly sounding better accounted for their popularity. |
#12
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![]() "S888Wheel" wrote in message ... Arny said It's really simple François. You, someone, or the recording industry needs to deliver for free public audition, a regular high-bitrate music recording, one that people in general reliably identify as sounding different from the same recording downsampled to CD format, in some kind of level-matched, time-synched, bias-controlled listening test. Just one such recording will make things really interesting. I said Interesting to a group of about 20 people. A far larger number of people have already expressed a preference for SACDs based on informal, uncontroled comparisons. Whether or not you like it, that is good enough for most consumers. Arny said Which is why we have influential national publications publishing articles entitled: "DVD-Audio and SACD fail to impress electronics consumers" I addressed that issue later on in my post. Most consumers are interested in convenience and portability not sound quality. So yeah, DVD Audio and SACD are not likely to impress electronic consumers. They offer no advantage in convenience or portability. They are clearly aimed at a small niche market. Arny said It's all that pent-up consumer interest in DVD-A and SACD that stimulated the author to write, and the editor to publish such an article. What are you trying to say? I said I haven't really been following the format wars of late but I would suspect that it will take inexpensive portable players and autochangers for the car for SACD or DVD audio to take off. Arny said Consumer interest has nothing to do with it, right? It has everything to do with it. Most *consumers* are *interested* in formats that maximize convenience and portability. CD is still way ahead in those respects. I said That is what it took for CDs to take off. Arny said No it isn't. Yes it is. Arny said And it isn't what it took for DVD-V to take off. I didn't say it was.You are comparing apples to oranges. People are used to watching video at home so it should be no surprise that DVDs were able to do well before they became so portable. The DVD format took off for the same reason as the CD, better quality. A DVD picture is superior to a VHS picture and it has better sound quality. But the fact is they are quite convenient and quite portable. I am confident that this has helped the success of that medium. Arny said The autochanger thing has to be one of the worst red herrings in recent RAO history,and that's saying quite a bit. Why do you need a changer with media that already plays for a couple of hours from a single disc? Because commercial discs rarely have a couple hours of material on them. Arny said The answer is that you don't. Wrong answer. Arny said And you said autochangers for the car? That's totally unreal. Hardly. But certainly CD players for the car were a major factor for the success of CDs even before autochangers were available. Convenience and portability. I said It is what the average consumer really wants. Convenience and portability. Arny said Well, compared to what? Inconvenience and nonportability. Arny said The pre-existing format for DVD-V was VHS tape, which was already reasonably convenient. Which has what to do with the topic of DVD Audio and SACD? Arny said Ironically, DVD-V's popularity was based on picture and sound quality. I would say there were other factors. Laser Disc already had VHS clearly beat in quality and that format has died. Because you could not watch the whole movie without the disc being turned over. Arny said It wasn't true for the CD which took maybe a decade for player prices to come down to those of the average turntable, No. They were available pretty much right away. Arny said and for which it took years and years for portable players including auto players to become popular. No. It took a few years for them to become avialable. As soon as they were affordable to the average consumer they took off in popularity. Coincidentally (not really a coincidence IMO) that was when the CD format took off as well. Arny said It wasn't true for the DVD which took off while DVD player prices were substantially higher than average CD and VHS player prices, and when there really was no such thing as a viable portable player that sold in any kind of serious volume. Which still has nothing to do with DVD Audio or SACD. Yeah, DVD came around at a good time when home theater became interesting to more consumers. I said The fact is most consumers are quite satisfied with MP3. Arny said Now finally sockpuppet, you say something that makes a little sense. Everything I said has made sense whether you agree with it or not. I said Most casual music listeners are not audiophiles. It is a niche market and always has been. Arny said Problem is, the audiophile market is too tiny of a niche to support two formats that could only possibly be interesting to audiophiles. SACD and DVD-A could be interesting formats if they actually sounded better, but of course they don't. It may be true that the market is too small to support all the formats. That has nothing to do with whether or not they offer any improvement in performance. If consumers believe they offer an improvement it doesn't matter if a handful of people disagree. Audiophiles have been raving about the improvements they hear from both new formats. Whether or not that is from a real difference in the formats themselves or a difference in the mastering of the titles or even an imagined difference it is of no consequence to the sales of titles in these formats. The perception is what matters. Arny said With DVD-A and SACD you've got two solutions looking for a problem that neither of them adequately solves, duking it out in a niche marketplace. Be still my heart! Yours is only one opinion. You may be right though that the audiophile market may simply be too small to support the formats. Time will tell. It doesn't seem to take a large market to support the audio vinyl niche. That is still enjoying a substantial reniassance much to my delight. |
#13
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I said
A far larger number of people have already expressed a preference for SACDs based on informal, uncontroled comparisons. Mike said Which are therefore meaningless. Wrong. They may or may not be accurate but they are far from meaningless. I said Whether or not you like it, that is good enough for most consumers. Mike said Other than when the music is mixed for surround sound, I can't tell any difference between SACD and CD. Then I would say you may be having problems with your hearing perception. While there may be some debate over whether or not the media matters there is no debate I know of over whether or not the mastering matters. Unless all your comparisons have been with CDs and SACDs that have identica; masterings you atre failing to hear real and accepted differences. I said I haven't really been following the format wars of late but I would suspect that it will take inexpensive portable players and autochangers for the car for SACD or DVD audio to take off. That is what it took for CDs to take off. Mike said The format took off therefore there were inexpensive portable players, not the other way round. There were reletively inexpensive players well before the format ever took off. That is a fact. Mike said CD's took off because they sound better and they take up less space than an LP. Mostly sounding better accounted for their popularity. They took off because they sound better and are more durable than cassettes and every bit as convenient and portable. |
#14
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Mike said
The DVD format took off for the same reason as the CD, better quality. A DVD picture is superior to a VHS picture and it has better sound quality. So why didn't laser disc take off? It was clearly superior to VHS and is arguably superior to DVD. There is more to the formula of success to these formats than actual quality. VHS beat out Beta for reasons that had nothing to do with quality. LPs gave way to Cassettes for reasons that had nothing to do with quality. Convenience and portability have been the key factors IMO in audio. I think an interest is home theater helped DVDs along with all the bonus material and the full support of the industry. I said I would say there were other factors. Laser Disc already had VHS clearly beat in quality and that format has died. Mike said Because you could not watch the whole movie without the disc being turned over. You could if you had a player that played both sides. Mine does. |
#15
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"S888Wheel" wrote in message
Mike said The DVD format took off for the same reason as the CD, better quality. A DVD picture is superior to a VHS picture and it has better sound quality. So why didn't laser disc take off? Initially, LDs were crap, which cast a pall on the whole product. There was a major upgrade when they went from FM sound to PCM sound. The players were very expensive. Lots of reasons. It was clearly superior to VHS and is arguably superior to DVD. Only near the end of the practical life of the format. There is more to the formula of success to these formats than actual quality. VHS beat out Beta for reasons that had nothing to do with quality. The differences while noticeable were not that great. VHS went through quite a few stages of improvement after Beta had pretty well been chased out of the market. LPs gave way to Cassettes for reasons that had nothing to do with quality. No rumble, tics and pops in cassettes, unlike records. Convenience and portability have been the key factors IMO in audio. Yours is only one opinion. I think an interest is home theater helped DVDs along with all the bonus material and the full support of the industry. 5.1 sound also helped DVDs gain ground against VHS. |
#16
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![]() "S888Wheel" wrote in message ... Mike said The DVD format took off for the same reason as the CD, better quality. A DVD picture is superior to a VHS picture and it has better sound quality. So why didn't laser disc take off? It was clearly superior to VHS and is arguably superior to DVD. There is more to the formula of success to these formats than actual quality. VHS beat out Beta for reasons that had nothing to do with quality. LPs gave way to Cassettes for reasons that had nothing to do with quality. Convenience and portability have been the key factors IMO in audio. I think an interest is home theater helped DVDs along with all the bonus material and the full support of the industry. I said I would say there were other factors. Laser Disc already had VHS clearly beat in quality and that format has died. Mike said Because you could not watch the whole movie without the disc being turned over. You could if you had a player that played both sides. Mine does. Does it not stop while turning to the other side? |
#17
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![]() "S888Wheel" wrote in message ... I said A far larger number of people have already expressed a preference for SACDs based on informal, uncontroled comparisons. Mike said Which are therefore meaningless. Wrong. They may or may not be accurate but they are far from meaningless. From a scientific standpoint they are meaningless. I said Whether or not you like it, that is good enough for most consumers. Mike said Other than when the music is mixed for surround sound, I can't tell any difference between SACD and CD. Then I would say you may be having problems with your hearing perception. And your statement would be meaningless from a scientific standpoint. While there may be some debate over whether or not the media matters there is no debate I know of over whether or not the mastering matters. Unless all your comparisons have been with CDs and SACDs that have identica; masterings you atre failing to hear real and accepted differences. A good mix can be had in either format and has nothing to do with the sound of the format only with the sound of the mastering. I said I haven't really been following the format wars of late but I would suspect that it will take inexpensive portable players and autochangers for the car for SACD or DVD audio to take off. That is what it took for CDs to take off. Mike said The format took off therefore there were inexpensive portable players, not the other way round. There were reletively inexpensive players well before the format ever took off. That is a fact. Mike said CD's took off because they sound better and they take up less space than an LP. Mostly sounding better accounted for their popularity. They took off because they sound better and are more durable than cassettes and every bit as convenient and portable. |
#18
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#19
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#20
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![]() François Yves Le Gal said: Anyway, SA-CD is still a high end system, not a mass market one. You can't expect to see today the same volumes as CD. Would you mind telling us which audio-related company you work for? |
#22
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![]() S888Wheel said: The so-called mantra is "show me the beef". It is "show me the money." Or it is "where's the beef?" In the Kroo-hive, it's "Where are the rest of my turds?" |
#23
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I said
So why didn't laser disc take off? Arny said Initially, LDs were crap, which cast a pall on the whole product. I totally disagree. They offered vastly superior performance to VHS from the get go. Arny said There was a major upgrade when they went from FM sound to PCM sound. The players were very expensive. Lots of reasons. They were not all very expensive. The discs themselves weren't all that expensvie either. Clearly other market forces were at work. Laser disc was clearly a superior medium to VHS and it died. I said It was clearly superior to VHS and is arguably superior to DVD. Arny said Only near the end of the practical life of the format. I disagree, It was always better than VHS and quite substantially so. I said There is more to the formula of success to these formats than actual quality. VHS beat out Beta for reasons that had nothing to do with quality. Arny said The differences while noticeable were not that great. That is a matter of opinion. But the point is the superior format died while the inferior one lived. Quality is obviously not the primary driving factor in the success of different formats. The reason Beta died is well known. It had nothing to do with quality. Arny said VHS went through quite a few stages of improvement after Beta had pretty well been chased out of the market. Yeah, *after.* Quality had nothing to do with the death of Beta. Quality had nothing to do with consumers choosing one format over the other. I said LPs gave way to Cassettes for reasons that had nothing to do with quality. Arny said No rumble, tics and pops in cassettes, unlike records. Are you seriously going to take the position that cassettes sound better than records? If so you really do need to upgrade your rig. I said Convenience and portability have been the key factors IMO in audio. Arny said Yours is only one opinion. Of course, as is the case with all people who are not suffering from multiple personalities. |
#24
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![]() LD's were bulky and heavy. Yeah, inconvenient. LD's were very expensive - around USD50,00 for a movie. No. they were cheaper than their VHS counterparts on average. LD's were dual sided, with only 60 mn max per side. Yeah, inconvenient. LD's weren't very reliable. Laser rot anyone? And so on... They were more reliable than VHS cassettes. Laser rot fortunately was fixed. Ultimately the problem with laser discs were mostly a matter of convenience. |
#25
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I said
So why didn't laser disc take off? It was clearly superior to VHS and is arguably superior to DVD. Tom said Not that much better than VHS/Beta and nowhere near DVD I quite disagree on both counts. DVD ghas some serious image problems that laser disc never suffered from. There is simply no contest between laser dics and VHS. Tom said Also saddled for a good share of its life with 2-channel sound. Also a problem that was fixed. I said There is more to the formula of success to these formats than actual quality. VHS beat out Beta for reasons that had nothing to do with quality. LPs gave way to Cassettes for reasons that had nothing to do with quality. Tom said LPs never "gave way" to cassette. Complete nonsense. In less than 10 years cassettes went from non-existance in the market to total domination of the market. Something like an 80% market share. The LP certainly did give way to the cassette. The fact that both are analog couldn't be less relevant to my claim. I said Convenience and portability have been the key factors IMO in audio. I think an interest is home theater helped DVDs along with all the bonus material and the full support of the industry. Tom said Radially new technolgy (genuine replacement technology) such as CD offers much improved performance along with convenience It is more convenient. Without that it wouldn't have made such an impact. I agree that it was an improvement in quality over cassettes. Tom said The perfect example is cd/LP & cassette. cd replaced both lp and cassette as the music choice because it was better performing AND more portable and convenient. Yes it was more convenient than LPs and better sounding than cassettes. It makes perfect sense that it would overtake them both once it was convenient enough to compete with cassettes. The fact is that better sound from LPs over CDs comes at a higher price tag that most consumers are not willing to pay. Hence it has been reduced to a niche market. A market that continues to thrive in it's niche. |
#26
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![]() Nousiane mumbled: Radially new technolgy So you welcomed turntables and the media they play? I'd never have suspected that. |
#27
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#28
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![]() "George M. Middius" wrote in message ... Nousiane mumbled: Radially new technolgy So you welcomed turntables and the media they play? I'd never have suspected that. Yes, lp's are a radial technology. ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#29
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#30
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![]() I said So why didn't laser disc take off? It was clearly superior to VHS and is arguably superior to DVD. Tom said Not that much better than VHS/Beta and nowhere near DVD I said I quite disagree on both counts. DVD ghas some serious image problems that laser disc never suffered from. There is simply no contest between laser dics and VHS. Tom said Sure there was. Price was only one. Availability was the other. i was strictly speaking about performance. Tom said Picure quality on LD varied remarkably from release to release. As it did with VHS and still does with DVD. I persoanlly mastered the transfer of one comercial release for VHS and produced the commercial poduct. I spared no expense to produce the best VHS cassettes possible. The Laser disc produced off the same exact masters simply killed the VHS version. Laser discs were simply inherently superior. There is no way to prevent some people from producing crappy laser discs, DVDs or VHS cassettes. Tom said Personally I've never seen major picture quality problems with DVD and the basic picture quality improvement with DVD is much greater than the improvement of LD over VHS/Beta. Well we totally disagree on this one. While it is more a matter of original matterial and quality of transfer when comparing DVDs to laser discs there is no getting around the fact that the best DVDs still have major problems with contrast color accuracy and pixilation with sudden rapid movement in the image. You may not notice it but it bothers me a great deal. These problems are clearly a problem unique to the DVDs themselves. Tom said I was a Laser-Fan and spent several thousand on laser hardware and software, enjoying the picture improvement thoroughly, but it was not as major a step forward as DVD, which dispensed with the analog video. We obviously are looking at the image quite differently. Certainly some DVDs look better than some of their laser disc counterparts but for the most part I find the opposite to be true. i also find the best laser discs to be substantially better than anything on DVD. DVDs have some serious flaws. I live with them because it is all we have but it is not a good picture IMO unless you are watching cel animation without shading. Tom said LPs never "gave way" to cassette. I said Complete nonsense. In less than 10 years cassettes went from non-existance in the market to total domination of the market. Tom said My memory may be wrong but I thought that it took nearly 10 years from introduction before cassette captured half the market. It had 80% or there abouts by the eighties. Commercial releases on cassette hit the market in the mid to late seventees if I remember correctly. It took CDs about the same amount of time to overtake cassettes. The LP gave way to the cassette and the cassette gave way to the CD. The LP just happened to stick around while the cassette died. Tom said OTOH CD dominated LP in a comparatively short time. So? Cassettes were already totally dominating the market. Cassettes overtook 8-track pretty quickly too. Tom said IMO analog formats like VHS, Cassette and LP co-existed quite nicely just as CD/DVD coexist now. SACD and DVD-A are a "laser-like" format, a specialty market that will keep "going" as long as manufacturers will continue supporting it. Like Sony did with Beta and Pioneer did with Laser Disc. My gratitude to both of them. You say this as though LPs have gone away. They continue to enjoy a niche market that has grown substantially over the past 10 years. I said Something like an 80% market share. The LP certainly did give way to the cassette. The fact that both are analog couldn't be less relevant to my claim. Tom said Actually it is relevant. The 'real' technology replacement was analog by digital. We ween't talking about "technology"we were talking formats. So it was quite irrelevant dispite your attempt to change the issue. Tom said We have also overlooked the digital format wars. Remember DCC and Minidisc? Vaguely. Tom said How about DAT; it replaced open-reel analog tape in an eye-blink for both studio and on-location recordings. Balony! I said It is more convenient. Without that it wouldn't have made such an impact. I agree that it was an improvement in quality over cassettes. Tom said And a major, major improvement over LP. IYO. Not in mine. Tom said If it were primarily convenience than cassette would still be a major player. No. CDs are better in quality than cassettes. They are also much more rugged so they are a tad bit more convenient |
#31
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![]() Does it not stop while turning to the other side? I don't know. I don't open it when it is changing sides. |
#32
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#33
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"S888Wheel" wrote in message
I said So why didn't laser disc take off? Arny said Initially, LDs were crap, which cast a pall on the whole product. I totally disagree. They offered vastly superior performance to VHS from the get go. I guess you weren't there in the beginning, sockpuppet. Skipping was endemic. Arny said There was a major upgrade when they went from FM sound to PCM sound. The players were very expensive. Lots of reasons. They were not all very expensive. Look at the pricing, add inflation and then compare it to the current pricing of DVD players which bottoms out around $30. The discs themselves weren't all that expensive either. Look at the pricing, add inflation and then compare it to the current pricing of DVDs. Clearly other market forces were at work. As usual sockpuppet, your command of the facts is horrifically bad. Laser disc was clearly a superior medium to VHS and it died. The moral of the story is that there is nothing more frustrating and deadly than being ahead of your time. I said It was clearly superior to VHS and is arguably superior to DVD. Arny said Only near the end of the practical life of the format. I disagree, It was always better than VHS and quite substantially so. As usual sockpuppet, you immediately forget what you say. Either that, or your powers of expression are nil. You said: "...arguably superior to DVD." I said There is more to the formula of success to these formats than actual quality. VHS beat out Beta for reasons that had nothing to do with quality. Arny said The differences while noticeable were not that great. That is a matter of opinion. Relevant opinions are based on reliable facts. Since you've got most of the facts wrong, your opinions aren't relevant. But the point is the superior format died while the inferior one lived. Quality is obviously not the primary driving factor in the success of different formats. Quality has to be delivered at a reasonable price to create or satisfy a mass market. And of course, the market or the potential for it, has to exist. The reason Beta died is well known. It had nothing to do with quality. It was a testimony to Sony's lack of business and technical expertise. Arny said VHS went through quite a few stages of improvement after Beta had pretty well been chased out of the market. Yeah, *after.* Quality had nothing to do with the death of Beta. The one problem with the alleged quality of Beta was that it was not sufficient to overwhelm its competitor's superior business expertise and eventual technical expertise. Quality had nothing to do with consumers choosing one format over the other. All generalizions are false, and this one is founded in more than a little bit of historical error and incompetent business analysis. I said LPs gave way to Cassettes for reasons that had nothing to do with quality. Arny said No rumble, tics and pops in cassettes, unlike records. Are you seriously going to take the position that cassettes sound better than records? Cassettes had some sound quality advantages over LPs. Not the total overwhelming domination of digital, but there was a significant improvement. Like I said, no rumble, tics, and pops. They were more durable in a way. Most significantly, they were suitable for portable use. I'm old enough to remember the vain attempts to play vinyl in moving cars. I even sold a few of the players. If so you really do need to upgrade your rig. Unlike you sockpuppet, my ears are still good enough to hear rumble, tics and pops. I said Convenience and portability have been the key factors IMO in audio. Arny said Yours is only one opinion. Of course, as is the case with all people who are not suffering from multiple personalities. Just goes to show how limited and narrow your thinking is, sockpuppet. A normal person can have hold or be functionally aware of several opinions on a subject, and clearly see many sides to an argument. People who are obsessive, or have limited mentalities can only see one. Thanks for admitting that you are one such person, sockpuppet. |
#34
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"S888Wheel" wrote in message
I said So why didn't laser disc take off? Arny said Initially, LDs were crap, which cast a pall on the whole product. I totally disagree. They offered vastly superior performance to VHS from the get go. Let's run the numbers. Sockpuppet wheel says that he was just out of college when he bought his first CD player, but the CD player he bought wasn't one of the first two on the market. So, he was just out of college say in 1984 or later. In contrast, the LD was introduced in 1977, per this article: http://www.mindspring.com/~laserguru/popsci.htm . This was about 7 years earlier, when sockpuppet wheel was just apparently just getting into high school. Just guessing here, but sockpuppet wheel might not have gotten into LDs until they were on the market for 3-5 years or more. In contrast, at the time of the introduction of the LD I was in my mid-30's. I had a close friend who was an early adopter of LD. He bought one of the first LD players available in the city. I seem to recall that he bought a Phillips/Magnavox player and it was really bad. He took it back in a little while, and got a Pioneer player which was marginally acceptable. The major problems were skipping, repeats, and glitches in the video even when there was no skipping or repeating. Shades of vinyl! I subsequently got a detailed running commentary on the technical issues related to LDs because GM decided to release a lot of technical material on LDs. Early on, a LD production facility was built in Detroit. Its chief engineer was a person who remains a close friend to this day. He vents a lot! This LD plant was said to be the first independent (not built with direct help from Sony or Phillips) LD plant in the world. He had a lot to vent about. LDs are inherently far more difficult and expensive to make than CDs or DVDs simply because they are so large, and because they are composed of two pieces of plastic bonded together, back-to-back. By the time CDs were introduced, the whole process of making and playing LDs was working quite nicely, as it should given the timing. Making CDs was maybe an order of magnitude easier than making LDs, all things considered. That's one reason why the CD intro was as smooth as it was. Most of the serious technical battles were fought and won with LDs, and then they scaled the product way down and made it even easier to make and play. |
#35
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On Thu, 22 Jan 2004 09:10:58 -0500, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: This was about 7 years earlier, when sockpuppet wheel was just apparently just getting into high school. Just guessing here, but sockpuppet wheel might not have gotten into LDs until they were on the market for 3-5 years or more. So? You claim to have been building amps since you were 12 or earlier. Should we take this as a tacit admission from you that we should question this, since apparently high schoolers apparently "might not" have access to LDs? What logic you display... |
#36
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On Thu, 22 Jan 2004 09:10:58 -0500, "Arny Krueger"
wrote: In contrast, at the time of the introduction of the LD I was in my mid-30's. You mean you didn't invent the format? |
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#38
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"randyb" wrote in message
om (S888Wheel) wrote in message ... LD's were bulky and heavy. Yeah, inconvenient. LD's were very expensive - around USD50,00 for a movie. No. they were cheaper than their VHS counterparts on average. Not many people bought VHS tapes at those prices, either. Then someone had this idea - tape rentals... LD's were dual sided, with only 60 mn max per side. Yeah, inconvenient. LD's weren't very reliable. Laser rot anyone? And so on... They were more reliable than VHS cassettes. Near the end, yes. In the beginning, no. Actually, LDs were very reliable in the beginning, they very reliably failed to play properly. Laser rot fortunately was fixed. Ultimately the problem with laser discs were mostly a matter of convenience. Only if you ignore the other problems. Of course, we're going to get this convenience-mainly song-and-dance rammed down our throats by a vinyl bigot who claims that convenience is the main thing that CDs have going for them. My son had an early laser disk player. The FIRST question people asked was how much are the disk-at the time 40-100. OK, this was 1977. Let's play the inflation game. http://www.newsengin.com/neFreeTools.nsf For the LA area, exclusive of food and clothing: $40 in 1977 had the same buying power as $122.96 in 2003. $100 in 1977 had the same buying power as $307.40 in 2003. A DVD costs $10-18 in 2003. $10 in 2003 had the same buying power as $3.25 in 1977. $18 in 2003 had the same buying power as $5.86 in 1977. There was never a follow-up question. Gosh, I wonder why! How many movies are worth $120-300 to you? LOL! I was an early adoptee of DVD-same question how much are the disks, "that is not bad", how much for the player. I Players can be had today for $30-40. submit that the disks were too expensive to become a household format. Totally agreed. |
#39
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#40
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"Torresists" wrote in message
From: François Yves Le Gal Date: 1/22/2004 12:59 PM Central Standard Time Message-id: On Thu, 22 Jan 2004 13:07:37 -0500, "Arny Krueger" wrote: A DVD costs $10-18 in 2003. Nope. Make it 24.99 to 29.99 USD. Nope. 24.99 USD is way too high a figure. One can sometimes find DVDs for 10.00 USD. http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage....&type=category |
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