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Soon enough you will be choosing between a Rolls Royce and a rickshaw. If the former is beyond your reach, you will settle for the latter.
BrianM - If it's old gear you want, there is already an excess available and the prices on most of it are dropping precipitously.
Many current audiophiles have been slowed in the buying of new equipment by the difficulty involved in getting rid of the older stuff at a worthwhile price.If you go to a few audio shows and look at the age of the people there, you will get a feel for what I am saying. Another thing to consider is how many of the younger generation are buying new stuff. The purchase of used gear does not inspire the development of new products.
I hope you are able to understand that when I say it is over, I am making a projection. I don't mean it has stopped breathing but it has stopped generating new cells. The end is near.
As wayner sez in his sig, "The weakest link in any system is the prerecorded music."Interesting premise. It supposes that the signal starts out bad but is improved upon by the equipment. I think the opposite is true.
I couldn't disagree more with the pessimists here. Not to be rude, but many of the posts in this thread have an old fogie "kids these days" sound to them. Things change, the new generation replaces the old, that's true. But the idea that all music is going to end up as 128 kbs MP3 is just nonsensical. Memory and CPU speed has already passed the point where storing a digital format which is as good human hearing requires is trivial. Codecs like MP3 were invented only because that wasn't true a few years ago. But a few years from now, Moore's law will take us even further ahead past that point. A few years more and we may have smart formats that automatically adjust themselves to the room their in, the speaker configuration, etc. The prevalence of MP3s today, far from being a bad sign, means that there will be an entire generation that loves music and is willing to spend money on it (and it will be real money once they grow up and get real jobs). The collapse of the old-style music industry, rather than a disaster, is the greatest opportunity for small-time musicians and innovative artists in decades. I don't see a catastrophe - I see a golden age. But I always was an optimist .
it appears that the folks into this lunatic fringe pastime are not at all in danger of dying off any time soon.
I am with Daygloworange (god, did I have to admit it in public? )