loudness wars: digital recording to improve?


interesting article here: http://mixonline.com/mixline/reierson_loudness_war_0802/

let's hope the thesis is correct!
tanglewood
I didn't misunderstand. I was merely suggesting that things have been manipulated to sound better (or at all, for that matter) for some time. It was not meant to be an exact comparison.
In a sense everything recorded is "manipulated" in some way.

What matters I suppose is whether or not the customers like the results.
Mapman... True.

Manipulation in the form of equalization, compression, peak limiting, echo, etc are intended to change the way it sounds, and are therefore fair game for opinions. Error correction, on the other hand, changes nothing between the original data and the data played back, and so is inappropriate for discussion in context of sonic quality.
"Error correction, on the other hand, changes nothing between the original data and the data played back, and so is inappropriate for discussion in context of sonic quality. "

Agreed.