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I've gotta say, that's an impressive setup, Feanor! Looks like you could take out a wall with those things turned up full-blast!
By the way, I like the Terra Cotta Army dwelling on your top shelf.
Thanks, SA. It's not really a "high-end" setup -- no £4000 components here. Still, it offers wonderful resolution and transparency for the money. I really don't listen at very high volumes however; my average listen level, crescendos aside, is under 70 dB.
The Terra Cotta Army figures were a gift from my son from his trip to China.
Joined: Sat Jan 12, 2008 7:34 am Posts: 3967 Location: Idaho Falls, ID
Brian wrote:
I'm impressed with all that vinyl on the bottom shelf. I have some recordings that sound better that way.
Lots of vinyl has a "warmer" sound to it than digital music. I think a great deal of that has to do with the way music is recorded now. Back then they used less mics and picked up more ambience from the recording studio or hall and it worked better I think.
_________________ "I learned more from a three minute record, than I ever did in school."
I'm impressed with all that vinyl on the bottom shelf. I have some recordings that sound better that way.
Lots of vinyl has a "warmer" sound to it than digital music. I think a great deal of that has to do with the way music is recorded now. Back then they used less mics and picked up more ambience from the recording studio or hall and it worked better I think.
Yes, I think it has most to do with the recording techniques that have become better attuned to the medium. There have been technical improvements too, however, that pertain to both recording and playback.
The row of LPs I picture is mainly for show. I hardly ever play any of it, nor physically CDs for that matter, since most of my listening is computer playback. However my wife likes the look of the row of vinyl so there it stays!
The row of LPs I picture is mainly for show. I hardly ever play any of it, nor physically CDs for that matter, since most of my listening is computer playback. However my wife likes the look of the row of vinyl so there it stays!
That makes sense. What I didn't like about LPs was, each time I played one, I was contributing to its eventual demise. Even CDs can get scratched. If I weren't so lazy about such things, I'd upload my most-played CDs onto a hard drive or thumb drive.
_________________ "There are two things that haven't got to mean anything. The one is music, and the other one is laughter." Immanuel Kant.
Joined: Fri Sep 28, 2007 11:24 am Posts: 13232 Location: London, England
Brian wrote:
I have a thumb drive port in my car CD player, which is a nice feature.
It is strange how they are selling cars these days (at least here with UK TV ads) on the basis of having Ipod/bluetooth facilities. This is preposterous when you think about it, but then Ipod owners deserve no better.
_________________ "If I were but of noble birth..." - Rod Corkin
I have a thumb drive port in my car CD player, which is a nice feature.
It is strange how they are selling cars these days (at least here with UK TV ads) on the basis of having Ipod/bluetooth facilities. This is preposterous when you think about it, but then Ipod owners deserve no better.
Yeah, Ipod capability doesn't have much to do with the actual performance of a car.
In my case, it's kind of funny; I bought a 1996 Toyota Camry [I refuse to pay $20,000 for a car] but insisted on a CD player, so they threw one in for the deal. So I have a low-tech car, but like they say in Nashville, there ain't nothing wrong with the radio.
_________________ "There are two things that haven't got to mean anything. The one is music, and the other one is laughter." Immanuel Kant.
Joined: Sat Jan 12, 2008 7:34 am Posts: 3967 Location: Idaho Falls, ID
Rod Corkin wrote:
Brian wrote:
I have a thumb drive port in my car CD player, which is a nice feature.
It is strange how they are selling cars these days (at least here with UK TV ads) on the basis of having Ipod/bluetooth facilities. This is preposterous when you think about it, but then Ipod owners deserve no better.
Well I generally agree with you about iPod users, but I happen to own one because it's the only large capacity mp3 player on the market.
I have the 120 gb iPod classic and right now it has 107.89 gb worth of music. If the Zune came in a large capacity format I'd snap that up in heartbeat, but alas, it does not.
_________________ "I learned more from a three minute record, than I ever did in school."
Joined: Fri Sep 28, 2007 11:24 am Posts: 13232 Location: London, England
smileyman wrote:
I have the 120 gb iPod classic and right now it has 107.89 gb worth of music. If the Zune came in a large capacity format I'd snap that up in heartbeat, but alas, it does not.
Well if you had a WMA compatible player you wouldn't need so many gigs! I have a 20 gig Samsung and my whole A-List collection takes up only 12.5 gigs (8,616 tracks) in WMA64 format.
_________________ "If I were but of noble birth..." - Rod Corkin
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