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Bill and gang are trying to cover some pretty serious start-up costs and like every entrepreneur/risk-taker, they deserve our good-will. Creating stuff is hard.
While not outlandish in price, it seems to me that escalating the price within 2 days to that amount it surely decreases the numbers of people willing to try something new. The fact is that within the price point of $159-300 there are several alternative devices that offer something that this product is attempting to fill.DragonflyMeridian Explorerand a number of other devices made in the Far East. Too many to mention, too many forgettable devices that I think seem to exploit the latest and greatest mentality of push out as many pieces out the door before the novelty wears off. Well, that is my take on this whole scheme. Paul
any of above does DSD???V
Seth, thanks for bringing up this topic.Light Harmonic introduced Geek on Kickstarter in order to gauge the response to the product from a non-audiophile audience that is receptive to new ideas, new projects, and new products. We feel that plenty of folks would enjoy better sound while listening to music, watching movies, or gaming; our sense is that many buyers are kept away from high-quality audio by the amount of jargon and specsmanship contained in most product presentations... and perhaps by the hostility that is commonplace in the audiophile world, as displayed right here. The level of response indicates that mainstream buyers do indeed appreciate the benefits, and perhaps an approach that is somewhat different and humorous.I would invite you all to spend a little more time on Kickstarter and familiarize yourself with both the intent of the site and its guidelines. The site is designed to foster innovative projects and products by providing both exposure and funding; Kickstarter backers show their support by putting their money where there mouths are, just like those of us who support public and community radio stations --you DO support those kinds of stations, don't you?We are offering a cutting-edge product to supporters at major discounts from the $299 MSRP--I fail to see this as "cynical and manipulative". Regarding those other products: please understand that Geek is made entirely in the US. Boards are made and stuffed in California, aluminum enclosures are milled and anodized in California, final assembly and testing occurs at our facility in Sacramento. Packaging will be printed locally. Light Harmonic's CEO, Larry Ho, is a Taiwanese engineer and serial entrepreneur who has built and sold several successful companies in China, but as an audiophile, wanted to start an audio company in what he viewed as the birthplace of high-end audio: the US. He has been a consultant on digital-processing issues to a number of Silicon Valley corporations and was on the committee that drafted the audio standards for USB 2.0."Claim to do DSD"? Light Harmonic has been a leader in state-of-the-art DSD playback with the Da Vinci Dual DAC and creation of a USB cable that eliminates problems frequently encountered in DSD playback, as seen here:http://www.audiostream.com/content/light-harmonic-lightspeed-usb-cable. We don't "claim to do DSD", we simply state that Geek WILL do DSD--as indeed it does. And if you care to compare Geek's specs and capabilities with those other guys, you can find them here (scroll down below my ugly mug): http://mustgeekout.blogspot.comAnyway: thanks, Seth, for allowing me a moment on the soapbox. I hope you all will follow the campaign, and note the level of enthusiasm it has generated amongst regular folks who just want to enjoy their music.Isn't that what this is all about?
Thanks for stopping by. I have backed up the project.I have a question how does it do DSD does it convert to PCM and do the conversion as may be i am totally wrong i think we need two DAC chips for DSD and PCM.again just a question.And welcome againV