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The real advances you're hopeful about are being severely hampered by unimaginative, backward thinking leadership.
I do use .mp3 files for my portable player and they sound fine in that context.
Let me rephrase. We are nowhere close to the necessary non-fossil-fuel-based electric power grid to support everybody driving electric cars. As I see it, as long as fossil fuel companies can profit from a shift to V2G cars, we're going to be too slow switching away from fossil fuels. "Some form of electric car coming out in 5 years" ain't a revolution, and ain't gonna cut it. Should I assume that, like the current hybrid cars, these electric cars will be a novelty/fashion item for the next 10 years after that? I think much more drastic action is needed, first and foremost by raising fuel efficiency standards immediately to buy more time. The real advances you're hopeful about are being severely hampered by unimaginative, backward thinking leadership.
That is my point too. Stereo does not sound good enough in my context, large scale orchestral music or opera at home.
I should add I'm at least as worried about global warming as I am about dwindling energy resources. The steps to reduce pollution ain't happening fast enough. Electric cars would help - you'd still have the power plants, but not the tailpipes. But the scale of the reductions needed seems to elude people.Update: the scale, and the time frame, that is.
Livestock not only pollutes our water, air, and soil, said the FAO, it’s also “responsible for 18 percent of greenhouse gas emissions... a higher share than transport.”
Good point. We The Concerned Audio People are like sieves - we filter a ton of claims and try to hang onto a few good nuggets, letting the rest go. We largely assume .mp3 is worse than lossless. I don't care, because storage is cheap and I like knowing I have captured the full, original waveform. I do use .mp3 files for my portable player and they sound fine in that context.
Hey, they were talking about me,,,, I'm ahead of the curve and I'm not mourning the inevitable demise of CD's anymore than I was the LP's. It's a new day,,,, the day of the mp3 (or whatever codec you're using). WMP9 VBR Q90 codec myself, 2833 albums on 3 hard drives strong It's a new day baby! Robin
Blah - it all fake anyway. It's just a matter of selecting the fake that does it for you. ho-hum.
Covering 10% of Nevada with solar panels or 10% of North Dakota with windmills could replace all current U.S. power plants.
Holt's point, that the industry has lost its way, is well proven by the diversity of view points in this thread. (Everything from don't listen to your audio system if you want perfection, to MP3 is fine with me, to its all fake anyway.)
All very sad to me. IMO over 90% of audiophiles (does that term still have any validity?) have overspent on equipment for the room they have to listen in, so its easy to understand why they might be fustrated. What I mean is that their room is too small, too crowded, too domestically compromised, too poorly shaped, too poorly acoustically isolated, and just not available very often. Frankly with the crummy rooms many have available, they should just stick with headphones.
I'm having a hard time understanding why there needs to be a unified mission in audio. We all have different ideas about what's important to us personally. There are a LOT of folks who hinge their notion of realism to soundstaging and imaging. The "old" gear couldn't do anywhere near the precision possible today.That's not my cuppa but I embrace the opportunities and choices each of us has. Of course, this galaxy doesn't have a roadmap and great confusion abounds. I just don't understand how having so many choices available is a bad thing. Figure out what trips your trigger and pursue that - don't sweat the hype that creates its own demand (you).Yes, the room acoustic/speaker equation is a tough one. Bigger speakers are always better, oh unless they're too big for your room which you won't know until they're placed - so take a flier!There are too many dimensions of "truth" and they haven't properly been prioritized. IMO, the core values are coherency, dynamics, and tone. Beyond that, it's gravy. IMO, get those things right and the complaints about realism melt away.
Not that I have anything against the concept, but there's a beauty of simplicity about 2-channel audio...and it can sound darn good. Good enough for most people, and deep enough for real enthusiasts to explore with a lot of satisfaction. So keep shooting for the ideal, but don't throw the baby out with the bath water -- I doubt there is the consumer base to sustain it. I.e., what kind of a room do I need for this ideal recreation of a 3D performance? And what about all the recordings that aren't compatible with it? Most of the good music has been recorded already, in stereo, don't forget.