
June 21st 08, 01:29 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Has MP3 killed hifi?
In article , Doki
wrote:
I noticed today in John Lewis that they had no hifi or hifialike gear
for sale at all. Loads of digital radios, mp3 players and sets of
little speakers that ipods fit onto, but no mini systems or seperates
at all.
The significant term above may be "hifialike". So far as have been able to
tell, the majority of people have never had any real interest in 'hifi' in
terms of getting audio kit that can deliver the kind of performance some of
us know to be possible.
Has the mass market for hifi stuff completely died?
Did it ever exist? :-)
I suspect if you did a side by side comparison with £500s worth of
relatively mass market gear from 15 years ago (probably an amp, CD
player and a pair of bookshelf speakers, or a mini system) compared to
current gear (ie, ipod dock and ipod), the old stuff would sound better.
Dunno. May depend on how you select the items for the comparison.
One problem, perhaps, is that techniques like 'mp3' have given people a way
to distribute sound recordings/broadcasts in a way where lower quality
saves money and provides convenience. I suspect that more people chose CD
for convenience than for the results which can be obtained with a good disc
and replay system.
Certainly, when I occasionally borrow CDs from our local library, their
condition indicates that many people assume you can scratch the disc as
much as you like, cover it in grime, and it makes no difference! :-) Mind
you, borrowing LPs from a public library in the past was a rather stressful
activity - unless you happened to know the music librarian, so could get
first pick. :-]
Of course, if you read audio mags and take a keen interest, they you tend
to encounter a different approach and ideas. But this has always been a
minority interest so far as I have been able to tell. I doubt it has ever
been the case than well over 1 percent of people would even have regularly
bought audio mags, or done much more that buy whatever 'hifialike' was in a
local shop. Indeed, I wonder if most people even realise that 'stereo'
means more than 'has two speakers'... :-)
Slainte,
Jim
--
Change 'noise' to 'jcgl' if you wish to email me.
Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm
Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html
Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html
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June 21st 08, 03:57 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Has MP3 killed hifi?
Jim Lesurf wrote:
I wonder if most people even realise that 'stereo'
means more than 'has two speakers'... :-)
I've seen in my local Poundland store, something described on the packet
as 'stereo headset and microphone'. Yup, you've guessed it. One ear-piece...
--
Adrian C
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June 21st 08, 05:37 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Has MP3 killed hifi?
"Adrian C" wrote in message
...
Jim Lesurf wrote:
I wonder if most people even realise that 'stereo'
means more than 'has two speakers'... :-)
I've seen in my local Poundland store, something described on the packet
as 'stereo headset and microphone'. Yup, you've guessed it. One
ear-piece...
--
Adrian C
I was talking to someone recently who thought stereo meant the bass comes
out of one 'speaker and the treble out of the other. He couldn't see the
point of it........
S.
--
http://audiopages.googlepages.com
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June 21st 08, 06:43 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Has MP3 killed hifi?
"housetrained" wrote in message
...
It's always been. Who remembers the first 'stereo' Hi Fi? Compared to my
Pye Black Box mono it was total crap.
What do you mean by the "first" stereo HiFi?
David.
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June 21st 08, 10:34 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Has MP3 killed hifi?
"Doki" wrote in message
I noticed today in John Lewis that they had no hifi or
hifialike gear for sale at all.
How do you define "hifi"?
The word hifi is a shortening of "high fidelity" and high fidelity refers to
reproducing sound with accuracy.
Loads of digital radios,
Surely some of them are at least somewhat accurate in their reproduction.
mp3 players
Which can be used with highly accurate earphones and headphones to obtain
good, accurate sound.
and sets of little speakers that ipods fit onto,
Some of which are actually fairly accurate, or at least no less accurate
than some middle- or low-priced traditional home stereo sets.
but no mini systems
Some of those really sucked.
or seperates at all.
Arguably separates have been in their decline ever since integrated
amplifiers and then receivers became more popular.
Has the mass market for hifi stuff completely died?
The market for high fidelity audio has changed. It is now dominated by
portable and personal use equipment.
The
emphasis seems to have turned entirely to subwoofers that
produce midbass at a very small range of frequencies
(bandpass box perhaps?) along with a load of little
speakers that sound absolutely horrible.
There are many examples of that technology that sound great. You have to
spend a little money for them and be careful what you buy. IOW, nothing has
really changed except the format.
Some kit has
only tweeters for stereo seperation with a "sub"
producing the mid range.
Well, the speakers may be the size of tweeters, but it is possible that some
of them cover a lot more than just the treble.
Even the B&W zeppelin thing
sounded *very* poor to me.
I haven't had the opportunity to hear it.
It seems very strange to me given that development has
been driven by better quality in the past - ie moving
from LPs to CDs.
Many portable music players provide something that is effectively CD
quality, when they are playing files that are not lossy-compressed.
I suspect if you did a side by side
comparison with £500s worth of relatively mass market
gear from 15 years ago (probably an amp, CD player and a
pair of bookshelf speakers, or a mini system) compared to
current gear (ie, ipod dock and ipod), the old stuff
would sound better.
15 years ago we knew that really good headphones at a given price point
would vastly outperform speakers at the same price. The only thing that has
changed is that we have more options for really good headphones and
earphones.
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June 23rd 08, 05:32 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Has MP3 killed hifi?
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message
. ..
"Doki" wrote in message
I noticed today in John Lewis that they had no hifi or
hifialike gear for sale at all.
How do you define "hifi"?
The word hifi is a shortening of "high fidelity" and high fidelity refers
to reproducing sound with accuracy.
IIRC there was some standard about being able to produce a frequency range
of 50Hz-20kHz. Here I mean any kind of stereo system with a pair of decent
sized speakers, or a pair of small speakers and a proper sub (ie, actually
producing non-direction frequencies).
Loads of digital radios,
Surely some of them are at least somewhat accurate in their reproduction.
mp3 players
Which can be used with highly accurate earphones and headphones to obtain
good, accurate sound.
and sets of little speakers that ipods fit onto,
Some of which are actually fairly accurate, or at least no less accurate
than some middle- or low-priced traditional home stereo sets.
but no mini systems
Some of those really sucked.
Granted. Anything mass market product category is going to contain some
dregs - somehow a lot of Vauxhall Corsas were sold, and people keep buying
LCD tellies...
or seperates at all.
Arguably separates have been in their decline ever since integrated
amplifiers and then receivers became more popular.
Has the mass market for hifi stuff completely died?
The market for high fidelity audio has changed. It is now dominated by
portable and personal use equipment.
Perhaps, but the home kit that remains seems to be trying to look flashy and
be small, and that seems to be about the sole requirement. Sound quality
barely appears to come into the equation.
The
emphasis seems to have turned entirely to subwoofers that
produce midbass at a very small range of frequencies
(bandpass box perhaps?) along with a load of little
speakers that sound absolutely horrible.
There are many examples of that technology that sound great. You have to
spend a little money for them and be careful what you buy. IOW, nothing
has really changed except the format.
There may well be. But, the mass market stuff sounds horrendous. There's a
Sony system which I've heard
( http://www.johnlewis.com/230444465/Product.aspx if you're wondering) and it
is terrible. The little speakers do appear to be tweeters, as they produce
no mid range at all, and any speech or mid range stuff is very obviously
coming from the sub when you listen to the system.
Some kit has
only tweeters for stereo seperation with a "sub"
producing the mid range.
Well, the speakers may be the size of tweeters, but it is possible that
some of them cover a lot more than just the treble.
It may well be possible, but not at any sort of sane mass market price.
It seems very strange to me given that development has
been driven by better quality in the past - ie moving
from LPs to CDs.
Many portable music players provide something that is effectively CD
quality, when they are playing files that are not lossy-compressed.
Indeed, but that's not how they're typically used.
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June 25th 08, 03:10 PM
posted to uk.rec.audio
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Has MP3 killed hifi?
On 21 Jun, 23:34, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"Doki" wrote in message
I noticed today in John Lewis that they had no hifi or
hifialike gear for sale at all.
How do you define "hifi"?
The word hifi is a shortening of "high fidelity" and high fidelity refers to
reproducing sound with accuracy.
Loads of digital radios,
Surely some of them are at least somewhat accurate in their reproduction.
mp3 players
Which can be used with highly accurate earphones and headphones to obtain
good, accurate sound.
and sets of little speakers that ipods fit onto,
Some of which are actually fairly accurate, or at least no less accurate
than some middle- or low-priced traditional home stereo sets.
but no mini systems
Some of those really sucked.
or seperates at all.
Arguably separates have been in their decline ever since integrated
amplifiers and then receivers became more popular.
Has the mass market for hifi stuff completely died?
The market for high fidelity audio has changed. It is now dominated by
portable and personal use equipment.
The
emphasis seems to have turned entirely to subwoofers that
produce midbass at a very small range of frequencies
(bandpass box perhaps?) along with a load of little
speakers that sound absolutely horrible.
There are many examples of that technology that sound great. You have to
spend a little money for them and be careful what you buy. *IOW, nothing has
really changed except the format.
Some kit has
only tweeters for stereo seperation with a "sub"
producing the mid range.
Well, the speakers may be the size of tweeters, but it is possible that some
of them cover a lot more than just the treble.
Even the B&W zeppelin thing
sounded *very* poor to me.
I haven't had the opportunity to hear it.
It seems very strange to me given that development has
been driven by better quality in the past - ie moving
from LPs to CDs.
Many portable music players provide something that is effectively CD
quality, when they are playing files that are *not lossy-compressed.
*I suspect if you did a side by side
comparison with £500s worth of relatively mass market
gear from 15 years ago (probably an amp, CD player and a
pair of bookshelf speakers, or a mini system) compared to
current gear (ie, ipod dock and ipod), the old stuff
would sound better.
15 years ago we knew that really good headphones at a given price point
would vastly outperform speakers at the same price. The only thing that has
changed is that we have more options for really good headphones and
earphones.
How do you define "accurate"? Accurate to what? Unless you were there
when the recording was made and have an incredible memory of audio,
then the judgement of what is accurate or not is ********.Yes you may
have an idea of how it should sound..For example.A piano played in one
venue will have a different sound when played in another.An
individuals judgement of what might be accurate is purely a subjective
one.However,what sound better is another matter.There is no doubt that
MP3 has driven peoples expectations of hifi downward.There's little
point in buying superb replay equipment if you supply it low quality
source material.
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