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And you may be biased in a social situation to say something that sounds plausible cause if you keep saying "erm, sounds the same to me" then you look like a doofus and nobody wants to play audiophile with you anymore.
Here's what I don't get; is it okay to sell a really expensive cable as long as you don't claim it makes music sound better? If you market it as being durable and good looking then it's fine, but if I say it sounds better the Man should shut me down? Is the only difference between a Rolex watch and a pricey cable the fact that Rolex doesn't claim it tells time more accurately? This seems like a mighty fine line to get all bent out of shape about. Why isn't Rolex or any other maker of luxury goods being taken to task for their exorbitant prices?
A really big factor I think has to do with people's ability to put what they hear into words.
The issue here was really about fraudulent claims
My main point, I think, is that manufacturers should expect to have their feet held to the fire by _somebody_, reviewers, consumers, whoever, when they make egregious claims.
And it's pretty clear that there a number of manufacturers of "audio products" who are either delusional or cynical liars.
hopefully i haven't offended anyone too much....
I, for one, am most deeply non-offended. I think some Voodoo Pebble makers may feel differently however now that they know you threw away perfectly good small-colored-rock-buying money on that flight-by-night Audio Critic scam.
But as far as cynicism/lying/delusion goes: .....
Just what I said in an earlier post Nathan,...
Quote from: gitarretyp on 25 Sep 2006, 05:13 pmQuote from: Bob Reynolds on 25 Sep 2006, 03:20 pmQuote from: Eduardo AAVM on 24 Sep 2006, 08:24 pmThere 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 ...Can you provide any evidence for this statement? Thanks.See for instance this study on coke versus pepsi for the effect of visual stimuli and brand recognitionStudyThanks, the study shows exactly the reason why sighted listening comparisons are of no value. You hear what you want to hear when you see the logo on the front panel based on preconceived notions like cost, brand reputation or magazine reviews. Properly conducted ABX comparisons remove that bias.
Quote from: Bob Reynolds on 25 Sep 2006, 03:20 pmQuote from: Eduardo AAVM on 24 Sep 2006, 08:24 pmThere 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 ...Can you provide any evidence for this statement? Thanks.See for instance this study on coke versus pepsi for the effect of visual stimuli and brand recognitionStudy
Quote from: Eduardo AAVM on 24 Sep 2006, 08:24 pmThere 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 ...Can you provide any evidence for this statement? Thanks.
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 ...
I can think of only one effective remedy. Many years ago, long before our younger readers became interested in audio, the Federal Trade Commission put an end to fraudulent power-output claims in amplifiers. Today, the power-output specification must take the form of “200 watts continuous power into 8 ohms from 20 Hz to 20 kHz at less than 0.25% total harmonic distortion.” Before then, the same amplifier could have claimed 800 watts because it could produce that for 2 milliseconds at 1 kHz into 2 ohms with 10% distortion. What if the FTC suddenly became interested in audio cable advertising, for example? That chattering sound you hear comes from the teeth of cable vendors at the mere mention of the possibility. And that low, rumbling sound you hear is Doctor Zaius growling, “That's heresy!”Anyone out there whose nephew or brother-in-law is a young, crusading, Ralph-Nader-like employee of the FTC? Get him interested!
Sorry to bring this thread up again, but I have found evidence that the claims of state-intervention fantasties are indeed true.