Re: Can you take satellite radio seriously?
Amen.
Although an eight-track cart, when mastered decently (usually meaning self-recorded) on decent tape and played back on a high-quality deck (think Akai) can sound better than a modern-day cassette, particularly to my tin eardrums. Unfortunately most record-label tapes never approached that level, save for maybe RCA tapes ("there's a reason why the carts were sealled, as opposed to spring-clipped! They never need maintenence!" my Grampa always told me) and the majority, in fact, ended up being crap.
Of course, when compared to a reel to reel tape running at 15 IPS (or even 7, as most main-stream home reel to reel decks I've seen can't handle 15) all bets are off......
[size=8pt]"No manufacturer turns out mostly lemons; you just have a slightly better chance of getting a crappy machine from some than others. The crap percentage isn't much more than 5 percent for any of them, though."
Is it safe to assume, then, that you've never heard of a certain brand called "Coby"?
Incidentally, my parents have had, in total, eight Dell machines over the past decade. All have failled on the hardware level within the first couple years of installation. I even had an (admittedly older) Optiplex GX100 catch on fire last summer. Meanwhile, I'm still on my same self-built Pentium 4 machine that I built in 2003. That's my regular non-networked machine that I use for every-day, non-Internet purposes. The only serious problems I have had with it as of yet have all been software-related.
Apparently you guys just happened to get lucky. Uttering the name "Dell" in my computer centre is like publicly praying to Satan at the Holy See.