Comments on: The 30-year-old iPod?
iPods are disposable tech, high-end audio lasts a long, long time. The Audiophiliac ponders why more folks don't buy for the long haul.
iPods are disposable tech, high-end audio lasts a long, long time. The Audiophiliac ponders why more folks don't buy for the long haul.
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Donīt know the name.
Forgotten in the attic because no needles avaliable.
And no, I am not one of those analog snobs, I do have way more CDs than LPs. I just happen to be able to tell the difference.
I guess that you don't realize that, by your math, an LP would be unlistenable after a handful of plays? Who doesn't know what they're talking about?
and vinyl is vinyl - and for that, i recommend this:
http://www.tnt-audio.com/accessories/knosti_e.html
holy cow, this rocks my world! it's expensive considering that it probably costs the company less than $1 to manufacture it but it works, my god... does it work!
and yes, i think we all agree that disposable technology sucks - which ocean will be the lucky one to have millions of dead ipods dumped into it? the one reason i never bought an ipod - too expensive for another piece of portable technology that i will break just as easily as every portable cd player or digital camera i've owned.
btw - did you see the video review in this ny times article a few days ago?
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/10/technology/personaltech/10pogue.html?ex=1223697600&en=8d93782364a9891b&ei=5087&WT.mc_id=TE-D-I-NYT-MOD-MOD-M040-EM-0408-HDR&WT.mc_ev=click&mkt=TE-D-I-NYT-MOD-MOD-M040-EM-0408-HDR
and my turntable - pioneer PL-71 with a recent small buzz that must be fixed but i'm generally loving it. it's been in the family since the 70's and will be around for a long time to come.
You present a false choice between high-end, vinyl-based systems and cheapo digital. There's a wide range of choices between those two extremes and the buying decision for many people is more complex than you allow.
First, I think you're focused on the same demographic as the music marketers - teens and twenty somethings. This group certainly is guilty of the cheapo digital route and want music at the lowest possible price or free. Who cares if stolen music sounds bad - it was free to me!
Second, what good is a $5K sound system to the guy (me) who travels for work almost every week? The iPod is great because the convenience unlocks the music (i.e. the thing I get utility from). Sound systems, iPods, headphones and media are all tools to deliver the music. The quality of the tool does affect the utility derived from the music, but it is still just a tool.
Finally, people will get different levels of enjoyment out of increasing levels of quality. While I can't stand the pack-in iPod headphones and 128K MP3s sound tinny, I also can't hear the enough of a difference between a solid HK receiver and a Macintosh that cost many times more to justify the extra price. I buy audio technology up to the point that the marginal differences are no longer worth the marginal dollars. So an iPod carrying music at 256K and supporting Shure headphones is a great portable system but I could easily pay twice as much for headphones and another few hundred dollars on a headphone amp - not worth it to me. My home audio system costs ~$1,000 and it sounds great (even though I do wish I had spent a bit more for larger speakers).
Just because people don't have a turntable and actually use lossy codecs doesn't mean they don't care about quality.
A dirty record will still play 30-40 years from now. A cd will not. Even a 90 year old record is still playable. And if your record is losing volume every time you play it, there are more significant problems with your system than just the diofference between digital and analog.
Recently a friend paid me by giving me his old Thorens TD160 turntable which I've hooked up to an ADC and piped the signal into my MAC for doing LP to digital conversions.
I also have an iPOD for playing music while travelling.
- by gort69 April 16, 2008 4:24 PM PDT
- I have 3 tables. From a Thorens TD-124 to a TD147 to an Oracle Delphi 4. What I really like about the POD people is that they are listening to more music than any other group of people before them. The task that confronts the high end is simply to prove to them that we can make it sound better...and to make them care that it does.
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Showing 1 of 3 pages (57 Comments)Ivan Halbach