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A lot of doom and gloom in this thread. It seems like the older generation always lacks faith in the younger one. With this kind of attitude you guys are right, the high-end audio industry is going to all but disappear. I think that attitude has a lot to do with the decline we've seen in the industry over the years. Chances are if a twenty-something walks into a high-end shop they are going to be ignored or discouraged in some way. I know that this is not the case everywhere, but we've all heard the stories and some of us have experienced it ourselves. What should really happen is that when a younger person (or any person) walks into a store they should be sat down in front of the best system in the store, handed the remote, and allowed to play their own music.
Yup ... i totally agree with this one. Thats been my experience the first time i entered a hifi shop. It was not just a one-off experience. In many other stores, it was the same story. No one asked me anything ... nor did they show any enthusiasm. After that i decided to just chuck these snobbish dealers and rely on internet direct stores for all my audio purchases.
This thread was started inviting a discussion about cables..and look what happened. I'm paraphrasing here, but the statement that a system is only as good as it's cables is hooey. Hell, even Kevin Haskins (who sells cables) so much as said so. (or was that 'tongue-in-cheek', Kevin? )
As sad as it sounds the $10,000 cables are more likely to be poorly designed than more reasonable priced ones.
Quote from: Kevin Haskins on 1 Aug 2006, 05:08 amAs sad as it sounds the $10,000 cables are more likely to be poorly designed than more reasonable priced ones. This is one of the reasons that I stay away from boutique cables. I'm afraid that in order to produce an audible difference they will intentionally screw with the design. I love Blue Jeans Cable. Well made non-nonsense cable and great customer service.Edit: Kevin, I've also ordered cables from you in the past, and they are also a great value.
I think i read in stereophile sometime back where the reviewer absolutely loved a particular $$$$ cable, but itmeasured very badly. JA was left wondering if the cable was not messing with the sound.I just ordered abt 40 ft of speaker cables from blue jeans cable ... lets see how much of a difference they make. But i felt good looking at the prices ... A highly praised cable for under $0.60 a foot?? Thats quite amazing. Makes me wonder how much of a markup there is on cables. On the other hand, i really don't want to know.
Having spent several months with the CyberLight analog interconnects (I haven't yet checked out the Digital Datalinks): 1) I would not want to be in the business of making expensive standard cables right now; 2) Harmonic Technology's Light Analog Module Photon Transducer is the most significant single technological breakthrough I have experienced in my career as an audio reviewer. It is immediately superior in every way.Might measurements show signal degradation? Might someone come up with a way of "proving" that the LAM process induces a serious coloration even as it removes many others caused by conventional signal transmission? Perhaps—and I'm sure every other cable maker will be looking for those proofs.Me? I'm prepared to eat crow. No matter how I try to deny it, after many months of listening to these cables with a wide range of associated gear, their superiority to anything else out there that I've heard is undeniable. This superiority comes at a fairly stiff price, but if you can afford it, I don't think you'll be disappointed.
If this review were of a conventional product, I would dismiss it as being broken. Ultimately, no matter what someone might think of its sound—and Michael Fremer is one the most skilled listeners I know of—I really don't see how the CyberLight P2A and Wave cables can be recommended. I am puzzled that Harmonic Technology, which makes good-sounding, reasonably priced conventional cables, would risk their reputation with something as technically flawed as the CyberLight.