"This is quite surprising, especially as we often don’t think of bananas, or even wet mud, as great conductors"
-
"This is quite surprising, especially as we often don’t think of bananas, or even wet mud, as great conductors"
@BigJackBrass They clearly have no insights into what _I'm_ usually thinking about.
-
@BigJackBrass They clearly have no insights into what _I'm_ usually thinking about.
@BigJackBrass "... there are only six correct answers out of 43 guesses. We put these numbers in a spreadsheet, which showed that only 13.95% of the answers were correct."
This line made me giggle, maybe because I'm still loopy from being sick, but it makes it sound like only the power of a spreadsheet could truly confirm what 6 divided by 43 is.

-
@BigJackBrass "... there are only six correct answers out of 43 guesses. We put these numbers in a spreadsheet, which showed that only 13.95% of the answers were correct."
This line made me giggle, maybe because I'm still loopy from being sick, but it makes it sound like only the power of a spreadsheet could truly confirm what 6 divided by 43 is.

@SJohnRoss "You can't work it out in your head! The computing power of the Spreadsheet is the only thing that can calculate your data now. It's time to ask yourself what you believe."

-
"This is quite surprising, especially as we often don’t think of bananas, or even wet mud, as great conductors"
-
"This is quite surprising, especially as we often don’t think of bananas, or even wet mud, as great conductors"
@BigJackBrass "wth why are banana prices surging? oh no"
-
"This is quite surprising, especially as we often don’t think of bananas, or even wet mud, as great conductors"
@BigJackBrass This reminds me of an audiophile test someone conducted years ago to see if anyone could detect any difference between the absurdly expensive Monster Cables and bent coat hanger wire. Nope.
-
@BigJackBrass This reminds me of an audiophile test someone conducted years ago to see if anyone could detect any difference between the absurdly expensive Monster Cables and bent coat hanger wire. Nope.
@ridetheory There's a (possibly / probably apocryphal) tale about someone who was so fed up with their audiophile friend criticising their Hi-Fi that they hired a violinist to play at their home, hidden from the critical friend who had been asked to pop over and evaluate some new addition to the system. Sure enough, the friend complained about how unrealistic the violin sounded.
I'm not convinced it happened, but I've met people like that.
-
"This is quite surprising, especially as we often don’t think of bananas, or even wet mud, as great conductors"
@BigJackBrass @marcoarment There was a classical music forum I was on years ago that did a similar experiment with various compression bitrates. Most everyone got the 64, but apart from that I was one of the very few to get four for four and it took some *work*.
-
@BigJackBrass @marcoarment There was a classical music forum I was on years ago that did a similar experiment with various compression bitrates. Most everyone got the 64, but apart from that I was one of the very few to get four for four and it took some *work*.
@Dataless @marcoarment I've done a few tests comparing 128 up to lossless. Although I chose correctly, I can only claim to have been confident about the lowest quality; even then, I'm not convinced I would have been successful had the test not been a comparison. Taken in isolation these things can be extremely hard to identify.
-
"This is quite surprising, especially as we often don’t think of bananas, or even wet mud, as great conductors"
@BigJackBrass fiddling with audio cables is for amateurs.
An 82-Year-Old Japanese Audiophile Searches for the Best Sound by Installing His Own Electric Utility Pole in His Yard
As a longtime record collector (first because it was before CDs were invented) and a budding audiophile (because vinyl does sound better than digital, have at me in the comments if you must), I appreciate a good story about the search for perfect sound. But Takeo Morita takes it to a new level. Open Culture, openculture.com
Open Culture (www.openculture.com)
-
"This is quite surprising, especially as we often don’t think of bananas, or even wet mud, as great conductors"
@BigJackBrass you would need to use gold plated cable connectors to notice the difference
-
"This is quite surprising, especially as we often don’t think of bananas, or even wet mud, as great conductors"
@BigJackBrass Remember when Neil Young started Pono, the "studio quality music" service and player? In the intro video for the player there's a clip of him demonstrating it to another musician… in his car while he drives down a gravel road! They both say it "sounds so much better!" That's when I realized "audiophile" is likely a mental disorder.
-
"This is quite surprising, especially as we often don’t think of bananas, or even wet mud, as great conductors"
@BigJackBrass @marcoarment Haha. It’s physics. These gold plated voodoo has always been hilarious to me.
-
@ridetheory There's a (possibly / probably apocryphal) tale about someone who was so fed up with their audiophile friend criticising their Hi-Fi that they hired a violinist to play at their home, hidden from the critical friend who had been asked to pop over and evaluate some new addition to the system. Sure enough, the friend complained about how unrealistic the violin sounded.
I'm not convinced it happened, but I've met people like that.
@BigJackBrass
An old friend had some old but extremely expensive hi-fi he proudly demonstrated to me. There was a distinct mains hum on one channel but he couldn't hear it.
@ridetheory -
@BigJackBrass This reminds me of an audiophile test someone conducted years ago to see if anyone could detect any difference between the absurdly expensive Monster Cables and bent coat hanger wire. Nope.
@ridetheory @BigJackBrass Gotta buy those oxygen free gold cables though.
-
"This is quite surprising, especially as we often don’t think of bananas, or even wet mud, as great conductors"
@BigJackBrass @marcoarment it must be an oxygen free banana
-
"This is quite surprising, especially as we often don’t think of bananas, or even wet mud, as great conductors"
An audiophile is someone who spends a lot of money trying to make things sounds good.
An audio engineer is someone who makes a lot of money trying to make things sound good. -
"This is quite surprising, especially as we often don’t think of bananas, or even wet mud, as great conductors"
@BigJackBrass
Well, Mr. Smarty Pants, what about banana plugs? -
@BigJackBrass
Well, Mr. Smarty Pants, what about banana plugs? -
R relay@relay.mycrowd.ca shared this topic
