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For those of you who may be interested in how a real double blind test should be done you may wish to look up the work Jim Johnston. He is a former ATT researcher and also a member of the AES. I believe he just retired from Microsoft. The protocols for doing these tests are very demanding and rarely if ever done correctly in consumer audio. (remember: consumer audio is more about marketing than anything else). He has also posted quite frequently on Propellor Head Plaza in AA. When he isn't be harassed by some of the idiots on that board he is a wealth of knowledge.
For those of you who may be interested in how a real double blind test should be done you may wish to look up the work Jim Johnston. He is a former ATT researcher and also a member of the AES. I believe he just retired from Microsoft. The protocols for doing these tests are very demanding and rarely if ever done correctly in consumer audio. (remember: consumer audio is more about marketing than anything else). He has also posted quite frequently on Propellor Head Plaza in AA. When he isn't be harassed by some of the idiots on that board he is a wealth of knowledge.There is one thing that I really find tough to swallow is the general claim that all "competently designed" electronics (whatever that means) sound the same. I would think that would be statistically impossible. d.b.
Another thing that the Audio Critic covers is often not found in other audio magazines - reliability and construction. If you look over past issues you'll find one Audio Circle manufacturer who they nailed for shoddy construction
I'm a little mystified by your claim that all objectivists are anti-market. As you well know, a market presupposes perfect information......
Many purveyors of voodoo pebbles.......
If the claim were that this is like the watch market .....
People like dado5 have successfully done their job of limiting our choice......
Quote from: Rick Craig on 30 Sep 2006, 03:37 amAnother thing that the Audio Critic covers is often not found in other audio magazines - reliability and construction. If you look over past issues you'll find one Audio Circle manufacturer who they nailed for shoddy construction Yes, David Rich is very particular. Little details like whether or not switches and pots are sealed, what type of capacitor is in the feedback loop, thickness of the sheet metal, how reliable is the speaker protection circuit, etc. And yes a few AC folks appear in their pages.
I should point out that it's not accurate to call them "voodoo pebbles". I contacted a leading witch doctor in his bayou swamp lair and he assured me that such pebbles have nothing to do with proper voodoo rituals and that they are misusing voodoo to market their products. He never heard of voodoo being used to treat stereos, however he did offer to put a hex on anyone who sold me a bad stereo.
Snarg-- dado5, you bad person, I went and posted on your decoy thread Smile
If the maker of the hypothetical voodoo pebbles makes a claim....
Not to be inflammatory, but this argument seems to me to lead to the conclusion......
Just to finish flogging .....
For me anyone who defends ABX is completally insane. There is much more than simply statics in the complex human perception process where vission has a role even in AUDITION events, people seems to be aware of this in other areas but in audio there are two kind of rattlers "objetivists" and "subjectivists", personally I distrust both kinds, a mixed more intellgent approach is needed.
I don't think he should at all. As a producer he is only answerable to his customers and no one else. They will voice their opinions about his claims loud and clear through the megaphone of their wallets.
The big picture is that if a producer has satisfied customers no one can assert a crime has been committed. Dissatisfied customers will let themselves be known as a matter of course. If the product truly does not deliver what it promises, the producer will get that feedback very quickly in the form of unsold inventory. Laetrile is still available around the world but few use it anymore because it does not do a very good job of curing cancer.
I agree with you here. A claim of .0001% THD is empirically verifiable while a claim of improved sound is not. It is purely subjective.
Most audio consumers have no way of verifying the claimed technical performance metrics of a product for themselves. This is second hand QA based on pure faith in the pronouncements of experts (or salesmen), it has nothing whatever to do with the intended use of the device.
We have way highjacked this thread totoro!I believe all markets should be free, medicine included. Ultimately only an individual can determine if he is feeling poorly and only he can make the decision to relieve his suffering. He is free (or rather should be) to choose conventional medicine or alternatives and accept the consequences either way. If someone diagnoses him with a condition, promises a cure and he dies from the disease or his otherwise injured by the treatment, he or his survivors have every right to pursue justice. Government restriction of the medical market is no solution here. It ends up doing far more to protect the holders of the government granted monoply privilege than provide justice to those injured by their practices and products. Let med school grads and acupuncturists, pharmaceutical companies and herbalists, psychiatrists and scientologists all offer their wares without restriction and let the consumer decide who provides the better treatments.'Improved sound' is purely subjective. DBX testing would prove nothing pass or fail. All someone has to do is say that the stuff 'improved the sound' of his system....how can one prove it didn't?. And again why 'should' any producer submit his product to such testing? If he has happy customers, he is delivering what he promised and no crime has been committed. If he has unhappy customers, they will seek redress or simply not give him any more of their money. The only ones satisfied by such testing will be those calling for it.....it is very unlikely that negative results on conventional tests are going to sway buyers already shopping in an unconventional market.