Two questions to make you mad.


#1 Why is it that the worlds most sophisticated and accurate machine the (ASML) TWINSCAN NXE:3600D doesn’t use special AC or signal cables to make 3nm semiconductors. Audiophiles need special cables for accuracy?

#2 Why is it that you can always tell when a piano is playing live, or even an electric guitar is playing live 2 houses away directly into an amp through walls and windows?

In the 1960s Electro Voice announced that their speakers could reproduce exactly accurate sounds, many believed them.

We are fooling ourselves, our hobby is full of lies and we can’t even face facts.

128x128donavabdear

....this and those questions made me So Mad I could almost fall aslee.....

@donavabdear , you ought to bore your guitar buddy about the Deads' "Wall of Sound", and what it consisted of....

Not that it'll change his blind or rock his whirl'd, but at least he can be intelligently clueless about the things he can play with....😏

Btw, a monied dilettante has cretined a reduced version of the WoS.....appeared to be 'bout 10' tall x 20 odd ft. wide.....😍

Just in time for the holidays

@mahgister 
Thanks for your note, I had a feeling you'd have some interesting thoughts. I think A I will change everything in sound one of the interesting things that will change soon will be the meaningless ideas that we pay so much for today that will be totally missing from future systems. A I won't understand fluff or aesthetics or marketing hype. A I may finally give the end user a standard for acoustics then after that we can modify the sound to suit our taste. A I will need quantum computers to really change things but that is just around the corner as well.

There's a basic lack of understanding here about guitar amps, and I'm too lazy to address it. However, I generally plug my TWINSCAN NXE:3600D into a wall socket and let it rip...it still doesn't sound very good but...meh...I understand psycho acoustics as the sound reflected off of a shower stall as recorded by Alfred Hitchcock.

I can stand on the streets of Savannah and listen to live musicians and imagine that I am in front of my stereo. I can sit in front of my stereo and imagine that I am at a live concert. I think it is all due to my special cables- or I’m too old and decrepit to no longer know the difference...

Thomas Edison started marketing his new phonograph in 1916 by having a live singer stand next to his phonograph on stage. He would task the audience with guessing if the singing was live or the recording. (No mention if he used special cables.) Over a hundred years later and we are still trying to find that magic.