Boy - excuse the rant here, but... That had to be produced by
the same people that do the Bose commercials. A lot of vague
promises about how the next thing they're going to sell you is
going to make you happy. The problem is not compression. It's
the fact that the young people cannot sit down like human
beings and listen to a record or a hi-rez file or anything
else. They have no attention span. Like they would ever sit
for 22 minutes and listen to that bullshit film. They have
too much to do, like tweeting that they're going to the
supermarket or whatever.
It wasn't always like that. In the day, every young guy
wanted a good hifi and you and your friends would go into the
room and just listen. Nothing else. That's all gone now,
except for us weirdos and half of us don't even listen to
music. We listen to cables and stillpoints and whatever other
crap we cherish.
IMO - If they want to sell something, sell the idea that it's
cool and satisfying and gratifying to own a good hifi and sit
down and listen. As long as music is only something to blast
in your ears while you're in the subway or cleaning the
toilet, it doesn't matter what the hell you're listening to.
Despite the foregoing, I'm really not a cynic. I truly
believe that people would appreciate sitting down and
listening to their favorite music in high-rez (CD or better)
on a really good system. It's getting them to do it that's
the trick. And I'm all out of tricks.
the same people that do the Bose commercials. A lot of vague
promises about how the next thing they're going to sell you is
going to make you happy. The problem is not compression. It's
the fact that the young people cannot sit down like human
beings and listen to a record or a hi-rez file or anything
else. They have no attention span. Like they would ever sit
for 22 minutes and listen to that bullshit film. They have
too much to do, like tweeting that they're going to the
supermarket or whatever.
It wasn't always like that. In the day, every young guy
wanted a good hifi and you and your friends would go into the
room and just listen. Nothing else. That's all gone now,
except for us weirdos and half of us don't even listen to
music. We listen to cables and stillpoints and whatever other
crap we cherish.
IMO - If they want to sell something, sell the idea that it's
cool and satisfying and gratifying to own a good hifi and sit
down and listen. As long as music is only something to blast
in your ears while you're in the subway or cleaning the
toilet, it doesn't matter what the hell you're listening to.
Despite the foregoing, I'm really not a cynic. I truly
believe that people would appreciate sitting down and
listening to their favorite music in high-rez (CD or better)
on a really good system. It's getting them to do it that's
the trick. And I'm all out of tricks.