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simple theory can actually be tremendously complex when applied to reality
Quote from: turkey on 27 Apr 2009, 08:11 pmYes, he was fighting a losing battle. Is that a fact? Audio Circle community is about "ears are deaf and what you see ( measurements) is what you hear?
Yes, he was fighting a losing battle.
http://stereophile.com/thinkpieces/165/Take a look at this. Fits in-really!
The sentence: Test equipment doesn't get tired or out of sorts. It measures what is there and the results are repeatable is based on ..bla blaThe red is utterly wrong and therefore the rest of the logical structure in the sentence is suggestive UNLESS you can prove "what is there" is infinite complete. Do you really think anno 2009 mankind will have NO MORE PROGRESS in scientific development as long as it is about electrical phenomena? I find this NOT a clever and wise assumption but perfectly the opposite.. The fundamentals of electricity lies in quantum mechanics and NOT what your MM and scope can tell you based on almost 100 years of OLD knowledgei rest my case
the second part of your post is an open door.of course when people drink too much or use drugs their experiences gets "distorted" this is known for thousands of years, what do I have to say to that? Far more untrue is the first part of the postah well this is part of a dynamic game. Try to open the mind of the Taliban so they start to respect women and other religions. Now, that would be a real challenge
There is a big difference between jitter in a digital system and speed stability in an analog system.
In digital, it can cause bits to be misread if the clock isn't synched to the data stream - 1's read for 0's, bits skipped causing errors in the word boundaries, etc.
There is a transition period between the 1 and 0 where voltage is in between the 2 values. At that point when it's read, there is some error allowed where the firmware will simply round.
To design equipment that is intended to be listened to as its primary function without listening as a part of the design process is a recipe for failure in the market place.
The industry is still trying to grapple with transient dynamic distortion phenomena,how to measure it,how to quantify it and how to minimize its impact on what we hear.
It surprises me that you cannot let loose the idea that man cannot measure for what he does not know yet.
Quote from: bpape on 27 Apr 2009, 02:48 pmThere is a big difference between jitter in a digital system and speed stability in an analog system.Yes, and that difference is mainly the speed at which the timing instability occurs.QuoteIn digital, it can cause bits to be misread if the clock isn't synched to the data stream - 1's read for 0's, bits skipped causing errors in the word boundaries, etc.Yes, but in practice this never happens unless something is broken. I use SPDIF and light pipes etc all the time, and I have never once had such problems. Besides, nobody will argue about obvious clicks and pops. The real issue is claims of subtle degradation of clarity and sound stage caused by jitter. This is simply not the case. Digital either works or it doesn't, and in my HT system it works every day all the time using inexpensive consumer grade wires and fiber optic cables.Every single device inside every single computer passes digital data flawlessly. The motherboard buss to the video card and hard drives, USB and Firewire devices, old-style serial and parallel printer ports, and all the rest. It all works every time, and data is never randomly or mysteriously corrupted by a receiving device confusing the ones and zeros or missing a leading edge transition.QuoteThere is a transition period between the 1 and 0 where voltage is in between the 2 values. At that point when it's read, there is some error allowed where the firmware will simply round.I don't think this is accurate either. The receiving devices know what sort of voltage levels to expect, and they don't read in-between values. This is easy to prove. Record a digital stream from a CD player or whatever to a hard drive five times in a row, then bit-compare the files. If the files are all the same - and they surely will be - then there was no corruption or mis-reading of ones and zeros.--Ethan
Every single device inside every single computer passes digital data flawlessly. The motherboard buss to the video card and hard drives, USB and Firewire devices, old-style serial and parallel printer ports, and all the rest. It all works every time, and data is never randomly or mysteriously corrupted by a receiving device confusing the ones and zeros or missing a leading edge transition.
Voltages do not instantaneously change from high to low, there is a lag between. It's not a perfect square wave.
As for not ever hearing any degradation, maybe you better try that on something other than those NS-10's
That's why mission-critical computers use things like ECC memory, and good data transport systems have error detection and correction built in. It's also why you don't see (or shouldn't see) PC hardware and OSes running critical systems for hospitals or the military, etc.
That article was seriously humorous or humourously serious! For me the following words described my audio experience:"Half the fun is the spontaneity and surprise."Spontaneity: when you are gingerly postured behind your hifi rack or speakers at 2:00 am in the morning, with a hoolahoop of cables around your neck when your wife steps into the lounge and asks, "what in hell are you up to!"Surprise: when the RCA cables that came with your cheap DVD player (which cables you almost thrashed) sounded better than your $XXXX cables!Best RegardsDennis
Quote from: turkey on 28 Apr 2009, 05:43 pmThat's why mission-critical computers use things like ECC memory, and good data transport systems have error detection and correction built in. It's also why you don't see (or shouldn't see) PC hardware and OSes running critical systems for hospitals or the military, etc.Well, I don't think even the most avid hi-fi nut would ever consider his rig to be mission critical.
As I said above twice now, it's easy to prove that digital data is not lost or changed. It's also easy to prove that jitter is a non-issue.--Ethan
I was simply disagreeing with your statement that data transfer in a computer is flawless.