Quick question for the Cables Don't Make a Difference Crowd.


Quick question for the Cables Don't Make a Difference Crowd. 

Why don't you all just completely eliminate cables by buying an all in one with powered speakers using Wi-Fi or BT?  

tkrtrb125

       Trust me on this one...

                           Uh huh!

       "The only thing worse than a lawyer..."

               Well: you know the jokes.

Feynman's views are where we should start but in life, decisions have to be made (or else made for us).  In my professions in law, real estate and finance as well as medical and food decisions for family, I have to have conclusions I can act on.  So, based on the information I have at the time, I make a decision.  I've forgotten more than I know. 

As to an all in one system, it serves the purposes for many or most music lovers. For me, I chose to collect the music I want to hear often first, then the equipment to best enjoy their reproduction.  I am not a perfectionist, just an average guy who is a polymath intellectual. It's my orientation, not my intellect that drives me to know more.

Trust me on this one: I know far more about the 1st Amendment, Public Forum Doctrine etc than you likely ever will ... Let’s see how long it takes for Tammy to pull this down.

You seem confused. This forum is about audio and music. This thread is about cables.

@cleeds It was also me being cheeky I was not really serious. I am middle of the road on cables, they should not impede a systems performance, anyway some took it way too serious I see. Now it’s about the Constitution. Yikes I really banged out a doozy. 

@fleschler -

Feynman's views are where we should start but in life, decisions have to be made (or else made for us).  In my professions in law, real estate and finance as well as medical and food decisions for family, I have to have conclusions I can act on. 

                                             To be clear:

            Feynman's, "views" won him a Nobel in Physics.   This: for his work in Quantum Electrodynamics (1965), which contributed greatly, to our understanding of how electricity functions on the subatomic level.

            Whether accepted by some, or not: the principles are used in the designs of the better cabling, many of us enjoy today.

            Some of his earlier (1940s), "conclusions" WERE acted upon, and largely responsible for ending WW II, regardless of one's agreement with the method.

            Beyond those: he helped develop the punched card system, used for data entry, in the early days of computation.

             I'll stick with his philosophies and record (far as successes/achievements), "in life", to emulate (thank you).                                     

                                          Happy listening!