Certainly true, however one should not be afraid to use a few dB of this EQ to fix room and speaker bumps and suckouts. Works great, sounds great. Not like previous EQ hardware. Very transparent.
Steve N.
Correct. Juice Hi Fi and others have been doing this for computers for a long long time now. Even some 3? years ago, a person that had essentially tried all the big buck and I mean big buck stuff out there was able to nail down this software with is system and the results were the greatest level of "anything" that he has ever heard. I do know "audiophiles" including the designer of the majority of my own electronics is entirely against this sort of stuff, but if done correctly, and using the proper people in the know, it does do wonders. My speakers use plate amps to drive the bass from 200hz on down and feature only a single band of parametric eq along with volume, and of course proper active integration into my mids/highs (coaxed and using a passive network), and this does a LOT in itself...so be it computer based or keeping things as modestly analog as possible, it REALLY helps to clean up the environment=terrible in most cases. IMHO, 90% of what we hear is the speakers and the acoustical environment the speakers are in...having the very best speakers to one's ears along with as precise an acoustical environment for them is quintessential to say the very least.
As a side note, I REALLY want to try the Off Ramp:)


! I've been trying to find my way around with what this, what that, etc. for my digital feed to my pre-dac, and I couldn't help myself when I was on your website yesterday. I find the pricing is becoming much more in line with the competition and I feel that's the point with "real" audio. I would have no problem putting my pre-dac against "anything" out there, just as I would likely find myself hard pressed to find much of anything to better the Off Ramp.
Cheers!
P.S. You're in OR??? I'm on the coast in Newport. Maybe I should bring my pre-dac out and have you give a listen with the Off-Ramp:)