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In Reply to: RE: See my question to you about Spread Spectrum below. posted by carcass93 on September 22, 2014 at 09:00:35
You said he was "totally wrong". That can't be, since he has already admitted that his system might lack resolution. Had you left out the word "totally" I would not have replied. :-)
There is a question, though and that concerns the meaning of "resolution". This is a very ambiguous audiophile term. I am immediately suspicious of people who use this term because for me, at least, the purpose of an audio system is to enjoy music or to review and critique recordings. It is easy to increase the ability of a system to "resolve" certain differences in recordings, such as to increase high frequency response making it easier to hear artifacts of poor digital recordings, etc., but such systems will not make music enjoyable. There is also a question of whether a device "resolves" differences in its input that it is supposed to resolve. So, for example, a balanced interconnect does a poor job of "resolving" ground loops. So if one is using such a system it will not be very "resolving" of certain types of power problems, yet it will almost certainly sound better than a similar single ended system. I used these two examples because they are both analog and easier for audiophiles to understand who don't understand digital electronics, computers and software.
So, if a DAC and downstream analog components "resolves" differences in a computer involving tweaking (not DSP) to me this is an indictment of the DAC and/or amplifiers, not an indictment of an untweaked computer. Sure, I tweak my computer software if it consistently makes a difference in what I hear, but if remaining differences were such as to be consistently and significantly audible then I would get another DAC.
In the "What's Best" and "AVS Forum" threads, amir was able to consistently hear differences between different digital formats. His "resolving" system was nothing but a stock laptop with built-in sound card and a pair of headphones. I don't buy the "resolving system" argument at all unless a system is seriously lacking in an essential musical aspect, e.g. audible noise, lack of or uneven bass, unnaturally truncated highs or audible distortion and commonly used playback levels. Such a system must be rejected for poor ability to play music, not for any lack of "resolution".
Tony Lauck
"Diversity is the law of nature; no two entities in this universe are uniform." - P.R. Sarkar
Follow Ups:
that go far beyond "tweaks"
Leaving that term, and those out: that is in no way what Carcass is talking about. It is also very easy to leave out all of computer audio when discussing things like resolution, system synergy, etc.
One just needs to get specific, comparative experiences yield differing results. Compare a NAD CD player to a Moon Eclipse, in the same system and one is going to sound different and way wrong, - (given that it's a decent set of amps & speakers or even headphone amp and cans). We know this by actually going out and having those experiences. Listening to either one of those CDPs, or even a computer audio system transport with DAC through a pair of Avalon speakers with a VAC integrated is going to sound radically different than through a Sharp boombox.
Experienced people, (listeners/analysts), like Kal Rubinson, T-Bone, etc., never, ever, say the kinds of things that "theorists" do. People who have heard 100s of systems, and individual components don't say such things. Most of these "resolving" components and systems rarely sound the same, (but they sometimes do), and differences between components are heard easily without tweaks.
People who attend shows also know these things to be true.
What people prefer in a playback system has nothing to do with the subject at hand.
"Asylums with doors open wide,
Where people had paid to see inside,
For entertainment they watch his body twist
Behind his eyes he says, 'I still exist.'"
My experience is with live acoustic music and the recording and playback of that. It does not extent to the never ending panoply of products being marketed to audiophiles, especially audiophiles who have lots of money and little ability to understand what they hear. My standard is live music. That is the only "state of the art" that is relevant to me. It is not necessary to go to audio shows and listen to dozens of flawed components and poorly set up systems to evaluate what one hears if one has this kind of absolute standard.
I suspect that most case of system synergy are just the fortuitous compensation of errors. If one is working in the dark out of ignorance this may seem to be "magic" but it is probably real. Unfortunately this is not something that the majority of audio salesmen or ex audio salesmen are likely to understand. (The best ones will have an intuitive understanding of the situation and wisely guide their customers.)
Tony Lauck
"Diversity is the law of nature; no two entities in this universe are uniform." - P.R. Sarkar
That none of your described stereotypes actually exist
"Asylums with doors open wide,
Where people had paid to see inside,
For entertainment they watch his body twist
Behind his eyes he says, 'I still exist.'"
I fail to see how subjectivism, as you're willing to accept it, is different from what I'm advocating. If I listen to option A and option B, and option B results in sound that is, at the same time, more detailed ("resolving") and less strident (or harsch), expanded in all dimensions - i.e. more enjoyable - what conclusion am I supposed to come to?I freely admit not being an EE, not having an education in that field, and not being able to have in-depth discussion in technical terms . However, why does that matter - in the sense why would that impact my ability to perceive audible differences?
How about this - what follows is to me pretty much what EE is to you or Thorsten:
Let's say you are a user of some financial analytical software. You're presented with 2 prototypes - and after 15 minutes of playing with each, you are certain that option #2 is more responsive, when running a particular type of analysis. As a user - is THAT all you need to know? Or you absolutely have to be aware of the fact that option #1 is implemented using SQL Server 2012 utilizing Columnstore indexes, and #2 - Netezza with highly optimized data distributions, resulting in maximized co-location?
Edits: 09/22/14
The basic issue is that "more details" may be wrong. It may not correspond to what is actually on the recording. This may be hard to appreciate, but less so if one has experience making recordings and playing them back. I do not question that people perceive differences. What I question is when they apply pseudo-technical reasoning to translate these perceptions back to specific causes. (Not generally a problem with you, BTW.)
When I evaluate a piece of software, I try to get a feel for what it is supposed to do, by experimentation or by RTFM. Then, at least in my better moments, I try it out with a few test cases. In many cases, if the software was ill conceived I succeed in crashing it on the spot. However, if it's just a matter of speed (a.k.a. performance) then I know there are may ways to expose or cover up performance difficulties. Decades ago I used to run competitive performance benchmarks, and was familiar with a variety of ways to present one's product "in the most favorable light". Later, I debunked various "scientific" performance analysis that showed that certain technologies (e.g. Ethernet) were inferior to others (e.g. Token ring). In most case, the manipulative techniques were obvious and covered in books such as How to Lie with Statistics.
My concern with databases and database theory was mostly around getting correct results, rather than optimizing performance. Back in those days, computer crashes were the rule rather than the exception, so data integrity was paramont. Hopefully, today the questions have advanced to matters of privacy and security.
Tony Lauck
"Diversity is the law of nature; no two entities in this universe are uniform." - P.R. Sarkar
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