In response to BOTB (Burned Out...), A.O., maybe it's time to go back to the
ol' reliable EBS system and scrap the EAS...
No, wait, the 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake is why we dropped EBS...
never mind...
I agree - there's nothing like the "linear" sound of a CD wave file than that
of an MP3. Even at 192-, 256- or 320-bit rate, an MP3 does not have the quality,
especially when I listen on my headphones...
Then again, some old-time audiophiles will tell you a certain song will sound
better on crackly-stereo-vinyl than it would on a CD...
It's too bad the laser-turntable, whose roots started with Finial in Sunnyvale
in the late-1980s and ended up in Japan, did not catch on. I don't have
$13K for such a turntable, unfortunately:
http://www.answers.com/topic/laser-turntable
Just over a year ago, I got my Sangean HD-1 for 99 bux at Fry's/Sunnyvale...
on CLOSEOUT! L O L!
Still, with nothing much worthwhile on HD-2, 99 bux is a LOT of money for
this type of receiver...and the HD-AM stinks, but you can look at other
R-I threads for the skinny on that thesis...
Oh, and back to the original theme of this thread...radio ain't dead...
It's still in critical condition, but it ain't dead... ;D
--jay
ol' reliable EBS system and scrap the EAS...
No, wait, the 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake is why we dropped EBS...
never mind...
John Walker said:I hate MP3's, iPods etc, maybe I'm an audio snob but they sound terrible to me. I downloaded Radiohead's In Rainbows when they offered it for whatever price you wanted to pay and burned it to a CD. When the physical CD came out a month or so later, I bought it, and when I popped it into my car's system, it was a revelation....The fidelity, the separation of instruments, everything. At least for me, internet radio will not be something I listen to until the day comes the quality is equal to the pure CD.
I agree - there's nothing like the "linear" sound of a CD wave file than that
of an MP3. Even at 192-, 256- or 320-bit rate, an MP3 does not have the quality,
especially when I listen on my headphones...
Then again, some old-time audiophiles will tell you a certain song will sound
better on crackly-stereo-vinyl than it would on a CD...
It's too bad the laser-turntable, whose roots started with Finial in Sunnyvale
in the late-1980s and ended up in Japan, did not catch on. I don't have
$13K for such a turntable, unfortunately:
http://www.answers.com/topic/laser-turntable
John Walker said:Radio, I can handle better, but I hate compression. There are no dynamics, no quiet and soft passages, and the bass is artificial sounding and overdone. Again, when I listen to a CD of something I've heard on the radio it sounds so much better. I'd look into HD radio but am not ready to pay 300 bucks for one
Just over a year ago, I got my Sangean HD-1 for 99 bux at Fry's/Sunnyvale...
on CLOSEOUT! L O L!
Still, with nothing much worthwhile on HD-2, 99 bux is a LOT of money for
this type of receiver...and the HD-AM stinks, but you can look at other
R-I threads for the skinny on that thesis...
Oh, and back to the original theme of this thread...radio ain't dead...
It's still in critical condition, but it ain't dead... ;D
--jay