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Technics direct drive turntables
On 21/02/2011 12:57, Arny Krueger wrote:
wrote in message eb.com On 20/02/2011 12:30, Arny Krueger wrote: "Keith wrote in message Forgive me if I disagree with you, but the tone of your posts (even today) is very often one of 'laying down the law' (or trying to) rather than reasoned debate. Root cause, someone who is willfully ignorant of commonly known and understand physical laws. Go on, I'll bite :-) Which physical laws of yours would these be? I have no physical laws, but the universe and Science have done well with theirs. Ah but you do :-) Which of the laws is he wilfuly ignorant of? Rob |
Technics direct drive turntables
"Jim Lesurf" wrote in message ... In article , David Looser wrote: Nobody is ditching CDs in favour of downloads because they think downloads have better fidelity, Well, it may be that *some* people are switching to downloads to get 96k/24bit (or similar) LPCM because they regard that as "better fidelity" than CD. How often they would be right to think this is another matter... :-) And how many downloads are avaiable in LPCM at all, let alone 96k/24bit? David. |
Technics direct drive turntables
"David Looser" wrote But there were people fascinated by TV at the time, and indeed there are people today fascinated by this formative period in the history of TV. My point is that by the logic that has been used to claim "fashionabilty" for vinyl pre-war TV should also be "fashionable". No idea, but then I don't think vinyl is 'fashionable' anyway. There has to be something about it though - Yell.com are showing a guy searching record shops (real records - LPs) in an ad I saw only last night. http://www.moirac.adsl24.co.uk/shown...lldotcomad.mpg ?? What's far more important is 'are SET valve amps fashionable'...?? Nope. Aw.... :-( OK, you got me there! I cannot *prove* that to be the case. Put it like this, I see people out and about with mp3 players all the time. This is where we differ, I haven't seen very many at all: mobile phones stuck to the side of their heads - yes! You really don't get out much do you Keith! Not at the moment. Try opening your eyes next time you are on a bus or train (or are you one of those who never goes anywhere by public transport?) 'Fraid so - it's been years since I was on a train and decades since I was on a bus! :-) 'Commonplace' doesn't equate with *quality* - usually quite the reverse! That comment shows that you are missing the point by miles! You were talking about the *popularity* of vinyl and now, when I state that vinyl is far less popular than CD or mp3 you start wittering on about quality. Just try conceding a point when you lose, rather than try and pretend that we were talking about something different. :-( I think it's all in your head - when did I ever give you the impression that I thought vinyl was currently popular with any more than a tiny majority? (I don't think you need anyone else present to have an argument, you seem to be able to handle 'both sides' on your own! :-) BTW your statement "Commonplace' doesn't equate with *quality* - usually quite the reverse" doesn't hold true these days. Automated mass production not only produces items at low cost (thus allowing them to be "commonplace") but also produces them at a consistent high quality. Now you're the one *missing the point*.... The only 'opposition' you get here is to your oft-stated views on CD. That they are crap? (I've only said that once before - yesterday, I think! :-) Whether you've used that exact expression before or not, you've expressed that view frequently, so please don't try playing games with words. I cannot decide whether you do this sort of thing deliberately to avoid having to concede a point, or whether you genuinely cannot follow arguments further back than one post in a thread. That might be the best thing you've said - I almost never backtrack to find what has gone before and it's fairly obvious there are occasionally some misunderstandings. Can't be helped. But it isn't - it's CDs which are crap! ;-) Very much a minority view. Plummetting sales say different! Again you are totally missing the point (you do it so well Keith, and so often!) Sales are not plumetting because people think CDs are "crap", they are plumeting because music is increasingly being downloaded (often at no cost) and listened to from mp3 players etc. (They are obviously not good enough to prevent people ditching them in favour of downloads for the same sort of money! :-) Nobody is ditching CDs in favour of downloads because they think downloads have better fidelity, Who TF said they were? There you go again with the 'makey up'.... they are doing it because downloads are quick, because they can buy the tracks they want rather than having to buy a whole album. And, since they are going to play the music from their mp3 player anyway, there's not really much point in bothering with a physical object. You know all this for certain? My original point remains: CDs are obviously not good enough to prevent people jacking them in in favour of downloads even when the downloads work out more expensive - apparently, according to an ad I referenced recently! You also seem to have missed the obvious with downloads: people download because it is quick and convenient and they either don't perceive a drop in 'digital sound quality' or don't care about it. |
Technics direct drive turntables
"Keith G" wrote in message
... 'Commonplace' doesn't equate with *quality* - usually quite the reverse! That comment shows that you are missing the point by miles! You were talking about the *popularity* of vinyl and now, when I state that vinyl is far less popular than CD or mp3 you start wittering on about quality. Just try conceding a point when you lose, rather than try and pretend that we were talking about something different. :-( I think it's all in your head - when did I ever give you the impression that I thought vinyl was currently popular with any more than a tiny majority? (I don't think you need anyone else present to have an argument, you seem to be able to handle 'both sides' on your own! :-) The problem with arguing anything with you Keith, is that you keep changing your tack, it's like trying to hit a moving target :-( BTW your statement "Commonplace' doesn't equate with *quality* - usually quite the reverse" doesn't hold true these days. Automated mass production not only produces items at low cost (thus allowing them to be "commonplace") but also produces them at a consistent high quality. Now you're the one *missing the point*.... Am I? can you explain what you think the point is? (They are obviously not good enough to prevent people ditching them in favour of downloads for the same sort of money! :-) Nobody is ditching CDs in favour of downloads because they think downloads have better fidelity, Who TF said they were? There you go again with the 'makey up'.... Is that not what you said above? "(They are obviously not good enough to prevent people ditching them in favour of downloads for the same sort of money! :-)" Can you explain what you *did* mean if not what you appeared to mean. You know all this for certain? My original point remains: CDs are obviously not good enough to prevent people jacking them in in favour of downloads even when the downloads work out more expensive - apparently, according to an ad I referenced recently! Ah, maybe were are getting to the thinking behind your ramblings here. What, *exactly* do you mean by "not good enough"? Since you said above that I was making things up, when I assumed you meant their audio performance wasn't good enough, it can't be that. So in what way *exactly* are you saying that people don't think that CDs are "good enough" You also seem to have missed the obvious with downloads: people download because it is quick and convenient and they either don't perceive a drop in 'digital sound quality' or don't care about it. I didn't miss that point at all. CDs are actually unneccesarily good, in terms of audio quality, for the mainstream domestic market. That market is quite happy with mp3s. David. |
Technics direct drive turntables
In article , David Looser
wrote: "Jim Lesurf" wrote in message ... In article , David Looser wrote: Nobody is ditching CDs in favour of downloads because they think downloads have better fidelity, Well, it may be that *some* people are switching to downloads to get 96k/24bit (or similar) LPCM because they regard that as "better fidelity" than CD. How often they would be right to think this is another matter... :-) And how many downloads are avaiable in LPCM at all, let alone 96k/24bit? No idea. Clearly non-zero, though. Or is your objection that FLAC, for example, isn't LPCM when downloaded? Erm... How many people did you mean by "nobody"? Or was your real point that no-one (you know of) is discarding any CDs once they have a downloaded 'high rez' sic LPCM version? You don't actually say which (or all) CDs you mean. Or were you simply assuming a 'download' meant a low-rate mp3, and forgetting the existence of high rate/depth LPCM downloads? That was the impression you comment gave to me. Slainte, Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page 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 |
Technics direct drive turntables
"David Looser" wrote in message ... "Keith G" wrote I think it's all in your head - when did I ever give you the impression that I thought vinyl was currently popular with any more than a tiny majority? (I don't think you need anyone else present to have an argument, you seem to be able to handle 'both sides' on your own! :-) The problem with arguing anything with you Keith, is that you keep changing your tack, it's like trying to hit a moving target :-( I really don't see why - my views don't change...?? BTW your statement "Commonplace' doesn't equate with *quality* - usually quite the reverse" doesn't hold true these days. Automated mass production not only produces items at low cost (thus allowing them to be "commonplace") but also produces them at a consistent high quality. Now you're the one *missing the point*.... Am I? can you explain what you think the point is? Sure, these days 'quality' items tend to be the 'hand crafted' low production run or even one-off stuff. And before you pull your usual trick and translate/twist that into me claiming *all* hand-made stuff is high quality or all mass-produced stuff is not high quality let me say that I am well aware this is not the case. (They are obviously not good enough to prevent people ditching them in favour of downloads for the same sort of money! :-) Nobody is ditching CDs in favour of downloads because they think downloads have better fidelity, Who TF said they were? There you go again with the 'makey up'.... Is that not what you said above? "(They are obviously not good enough to prevent people ditching them in favour of downloads for the same sort of money! :-)" Can you explain what you *did* mean if not what you appeared to mean. I'm afraid you are the only one up a gum-tree he I never mentioned 'better fidelity' - you did, read it again! You know all this for certain? My original point remains: CDs are obviously not good enough to prevent people jacking them in in favour of downloads even when the downloads work out more expensive - apparently, according to an ad I referenced recently! Ah, maybe were are getting to the thinking behind your ramblings here. What, *exactly* do you mean by "not good enough"? Since you said above that I was making things up, when I assumed you meant their audio performance wasn't good enough, it can't be that. So in what way *exactly* are you saying that people don't think that CDs are "good enough" Streuth, work it out for yourself! The fact that so many people download music (at CD prices?) demonstrates clearly that those people don't consider it worth waiting for the physical CD. If the physical CD was worth it and they *cared* they would buy the frigging CDs, wouldn't they? Savvy? :-) You also seem to have missed the obvious with downloads: people download because it is quick and convenient and they either don't perceive a drop in 'digital sound quality' or don't care about it. I didn't miss that point at all. CDs are actually unneccesarily good, in terms of audio quality, for the mainstream domestic market. That market is quite happy with mp3s. Yep. I'll go along with that - thus what music is available nowadays is (apparently) largely dictated by kids or kidults with iPods! (Thank Gawd I've got me vinyl! :-) |
Technics direct drive turntables
"Keith G" wrote in message
... "David Looser" wrote in message ... I really don't see why - my views don't change...?? No, your views don't change, but your debating points are as insubstantial as quicksand. BTW your statement "Commonplace' doesn't equate with *quality* - usually quite the reverse" doesn't hold true these days. Automated mass production not only produces items at low cost (thus allowing them to be "commonplace") but also produces them at a consistent high quality. Now you're the one *missing the point*.... Am I? can you explain what you think the point is? Sure, these days 'quality' items tend to be the 'hand crafted' low production run or even one-off stuff. Wrong! Those aren't "quality items" they are snob-appeal items. (They are obviously not good enough to prevent people ditching them in favour of downloads for the same sort of money! :-) I'm afraid you are the only one up a gum-tree he I never mentioned 'better fidelity' - you did, read it again! I know you didn't, you said "good". but since we talking about an object whose only reason for existance is to deliver an audio signal it's "goodness" is essentially it's ability to deliver a high fidelity audio signal. Streuth, work it out for yourself! The fact that so many people download music (at CD prices?) demonstrates clearly that those people don't consider it worth waiting for the physical CD. If the physical CD was worth it and they *cared* they would buy the frigging CDs, wouldn't they? Savvy? :-) I see. What a *really* strange way of looking at things. Why would people care about the physical CD?, it's what's on the CD they are buying, not the physical object. An LPCM 44.1/16bit download *is* a CD as far as audio quality and content are concerned. And in case you've been under the illusion that *I* care about CDs as physical objects, I don't. I care about audio quality, and currently the CD offers better audio quality than most downloads do. If that changes, and the pricing is acceptable, I'd be quite happy to buy downloads. I didn't miss that point at all. CDs are actually unneccesarily good, in terms of audio quality, for the mainstream domestic market. That market is quite happy with mp3s. Yep. I'll go along with that - thus what music is available nowadays is (apparently) largely dictated by kids or kidults with iPods! What's changed? The music that is available depends on what music gets bought. In the past most record sales were to kids with Dansettes, nowadays the kids have iPods (which, incidentally, deliver far better audio quality than the Dansettes ever did). David. |
Technics direct drive turntables
"Jim Lesurf" wrote in message
... In article , David Looser wrote: "Jim Lesurf" wrote in message ... In article , David Looser wrote: Nobody is ditching CDs in favour of downloads because they think downloads have better fidelity, Well, it may be that *some* people are switching to downloads to get 96k/24bit (or similar) LPCM because they regard that as "better fidelity" than CD. How often they would be right to think this is another matter... :-) And how many downloads are avaiable in LPCM at all, let alone 96k/24bit? No idea. Clearly non-zero, though. Or is your objection that FLAC, for example, isn't LPCM when downloaded? Erm... How many people did you mean by "nobody"? Or was your real point that no-one (you know of) is discarding any CDs once they have a downloaded 'high rez' sic LPCM version? You don't actually say which (or all) CDs you mean. Or were you simply assuming a 'download' meant a low-rate mp3, and forgetting the existence of high rate/depth LPCM downloads? That was the impression you comment gave to me. OK, Jim - you win! As far as I am aware the overwhelming majority of downloads available are of compressed mp3s, whilst the proportion of downloads available in better than CD quality is minute. Furthermore, whilst there has been much said in the media about the change of music buying habits in the direction of downloading, the suggestion that downloaders might be motivated by a disatisfation with the audio quality of CDs has never, to my knowledge, been made. So I withdraw "nobody" and substitute "hardly anybody". Will that satisfy you? David. |
Technics direct drive turntables
In article , David Looser
wrote: "Jim Lesurf" wrote in message ... Nobody is ditching CDs in favour of downloads because they think downloads have better fidelity, Well, it may be that *some* people are switching to downloads to get 96k/24bit (or similar) LPCM because they regard that as "better fidelity" than CD. How often they would be right to think this is another matter... [snip] OK, Jim - you win! As far as I am aware the overwhelming majority of downloads available are of compressed mp3s, whilst the proportion of downloads available in better than CD quality is minute. Agreed. Furthermore, whilst there has been much said in the media about the change of music buying habits in the direction of downloading, the suggestion that downloaders might be motivated by a disatisfation with the audio quality of CDs has never, to my knowledge, been made. Agreed. So I withdraw "nobody" and substitute "hardly anybody". Will that satisfy you? Yes. Hence what I wrote previously. I don't doubt that most of the downloads have been and are people getting mp3s or similar, often at low rates of fairly poorly made content. But it also seems clear that *some* people are downloading files which at least have the theoretical potential to be 'better' than CDDA. How much "better" any of them actually are, I dunno. But as bandwidth rises I assume a growing set of people may choose to download these 'high rez' files. Or at least move to higher bitrate better formats. e.g. a drift from 128k mp3 to 320k aac+. Not LPCM but better than poor rate mp3. Where that will end, I dunno. Maybe in the 'cloud'. Although personally I am wary of the current fashion for thinking all our data can be shifted into the 'cloud'. Personally I *would* prefer to be able to buy 'high rez' good quality files on a DVD with a nice booklet and case. But no doubt I am old-fashioned and take music and audio more seriously than many people who just want the sound they are happy with on their iPlop-clone. Perhaps we should call it iPlop music. :-) Slainte, Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page 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 |
Technics direct drive turntables
"Jim Lesurf" wrote in message
... In article , David Looser wrote: "Jim Lesurf" wrote in message ... Nobody is ditching CDs in favour of downloads because they think downloads have better fidelity, Well, it may be that *some* people are switching to downloads to get 96k/24bit (or similar) LPCM because they regard that as "better fidelity" than CD. How often they would be right to think this is another matter... [snip] OK, Jim - you win! As far as I am aware the overwhelming majority of downloads available are of compressed mp3s, whilst the proportion of downloads available in better than CD quality is minute. Agreed. Furthermore, whilst there has been much said in the media about the change of music buying habits in the direction of downloading, the suggestion that downloaders might be motivated by a disatisfation with the audio quality of CDs has never, to my knowledge, been made. Agreed. So I withdraw "nobody" and substitute "hardly anybody". Will that satisfy you? Yes. Hence what I wrote previously. I don't doubt that most of the downloads have been and are people getting mp3s or similar, often at low rates of fairly poorly made content. But it also seems clear that *some* people are downloading files which at least have the theoretical potential to be 'better' than CDDA. How much "better" any of them actually are, I dunno. But as bandwidth rises I assume a growing set of people may choose to download these 'high rez' files. Or at least move to higher bitrate better formats. e.g. a drift from 128k mp3 to 320k aac+. Not LPCM but better than poor rate mp3. Where that will end, I dunno. Maybe in the 'cloud'. Although personally I am wary of the current fashion for thinking all our data can be shifted into the 'cloud'. Personally I *would* prefer to be able to buy 'high rez' good quality files on a DVD with a nice booklet and case. But no doubt I am old-fashioned and take music and audio more seriously than many people who just want the sound they are happy with on their iPlop-clone. Perhaps we should call it iPlop music. :-) Agreed. My point (made in reply to Keith's claim that CD wasn't "good enough" to stop the move to downloads) was that it's not dissatisfaction with the audio quality of CDs that's driving the mass-market move to downloads. Yes, there may well be a small group of "audiophiles" who believe that 24bit and 96k or 192k must sound better than 44.1k/16bit, and will buy such "Hi-Res" files as downloads in preference to CDs if they can. But such people represent a microscopic part of the music-buying public, most of whom seem content with 128k mp3s. Whether those audiophiles can *actually* hear (rather than imagine they can) an improvement in audio quality in moving to such Hi-Res formats is, of course, another matter. I take your point about an audio DVD in a case with a nice booklet, I'm reminded of the 12" classical 78s my Grandad used to buy in *real* albums with a leather-effect cover with embossed gold lettering and a booklet printed on expensive looking paper inside. Goodness knows what the cost of those albums was in real terms compared to a CD of the same music today. But with the commercial failure of SACD and DVD-Audio I can't see the record industry risking producing the sort of product you want. BTW I doubt that it's being "old-fashioned" that makes you take music and audio more seriously. At least as far as audio quality is concerned the mass market has never been that fussy. David. |
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