High End er slutt...over.....avlyst.....borte....trist, men dagen er kommet......
PS! Gjelder også Uber High End og Ultra High End.......
For dere som sliter med å SE en video.......her kan dere LESE den skriftlige engelske versjonen:
"
Mark Fischer
for 48 minutter siden
Well, you are getting into the deeper problems. I'm glad to see it. In my last posting I outlined what I see as the problem of this industry. So this time let me go for the throat or more succinctly let me put a stake through the evil heart of this industry. I am not God. I've worked in many industries as an engineer, as a project manager, and as a project director. All of them were technologically much more advanced that this one. There were many people I've met whom I was in awe of. Absolutely brilliant. They ran circles around me in their fields of expertise. But I can proudly say that I'm still a pretty damned good engineer with a lot of formal and informal theoretical knowledge I've acquired in hard work in many fields and many decades of practical experience in many industries but I never worked in this one. Frankly, in the big picture it isn't worthy of my skills so it remained a hobby and an engineering challenge for me. So what am I getting at? Simply this. You excuses for engineers need to provide much better technology at a much lower price. There isn't a single piece of high end audio equipment on the market today that I would buy. The major flaw is in the concept of the system design. It doesn't get the job done. It never evolved. The details evolved but the basic system concept is still exactly the same as it was 65 years ago. So what do you people need to do? I'm talking to the owners of these companies. Hire the most competent engineers you can find, tell them to tear up everything they think they know, set it aside. Some of it is okay within its limited context, even stupid overkill. Some of it is irrelevant, and some of it is just dead wrong. Start over again from square one. What are you trying to do? What is your goal? In the words of my father who was also an engineer, if you can't say it with numbers then you're full of $H1T. So what is your goal? Trying to recreate a field of sound at someone's ears heard at one place at one time in another place at another time from a recording or broadcast. So that is where you start to study. Is it hard? Yes, it takes a lot of math, physics, and engineering. Frankly I've yet to meet a single person in this industry including the "gurus" who make, sell, review these systems who have the mental chops to be up to the task. The best system in the world that I invented, that makes even mediocre music sound beautiful beyond words have no components that are less than 30 years old. It wasn't necessary and the equipment was not expensive. If more expensive equipment was needed to get the job done I'd have bought it. But engineers are taught not to waste money on things that are not relevant to solving a problem.
Allen H.
for 20 minutter siden
BuT HoW DoeZ iT MeAsuRe?!?!?! - Amir
PS! Gjelder også Uber High End og Ultra High End.......
For dere som sliter med å SE en video.......her kan dere LESE den skriftlige engelske versjonen:
"
Mark Fischer
for 48 minutter siden
Well, you are getting into the deeper problems. I'm glad to see it. In my last posting I outlined what I see as the problem of this industry. So this time let me go for the throat or more succinctly let me put a stake through the evil heart of this industry. I am not God. I've worked in many industries as an engineer, as a project manager, and as a project director. All of them were technologically much more advanced that this one. There were many people I've met whom I was in awe of. Absolutely brilliant. They ran circles around me in their fields of expertise. But I can proudly say that I'm still a pretty damned good engineer with a lot of formal and informal theoretical knowledge I've acquired in hard work in many fields and many decades of practical experience in many industries but I never worked in this one. Frankly, in the big picture it isn't worthy of my skills so it remained a hobby and an engineering challenge for me. So what am I getting at? Simply this. You excuses for engineers need to provide much better technology at a much lower price. There isn't a single piece of high end audio equipment on the market today that I would buy. The major flaw is in the concept of the system design. It doesn't get the job done. It never evolved. The details evolved but the basic system concept is still exactly the same as it was 65 years ago. So what do you people need to do? I'm talking to the owners of these companies. Hire the most competent engineers you can find, tell them to tear up everything they think they know, set it aside. Some of it is okay within its limited context, even stupid overkill. Some of it is irrelevant, and some of it is just dead wrong. Start over again from square one. What are you trying to do? What is your goal? In the words of my father who was also an engineer, if you can't say it with numbers then you're full of $H1T. So what is your goal? Trying to recreate a field of sound at someone's ears heard at one place at one time in another place at another time from a recording or broadcast. So that is where you start to study. Is it hard? Yes, it takes a lot of math, physics, and engineering. Frankly I've yet to meet a single person in this industry including the "gurus" who make, sell, review these systems who have the mental chops to be up to the task. The best system in the world that I invented, that makes even mediocre music sound beautiful beyond words have no components that are less than 30 years old. It wasn't necessary and the equipment was not expensive. If more expensive equipment was needed to get the job done I'd have bought it. But engineers are taught not to waste money on things that are not relevant to solving a problem.
Allen H.
for 20 minutter siden
BuT HoW DoeZ iT MeAsuRe?!?!?! - Amir
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