More funny life [message #2831] |
Sun, 12 March 2006 07:31 |
Manualblock
Messages: 4973 Registered: May 2009
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Illuminati (13th Degree) |
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You know I am reading three sites that have as their thesis the incontrovertible assumption that the only way to define true difference in the sound of audio components is through blind ABX testing. After reading through the documentation they always have a description of the test methodology which always seems perfectly on the up and up. Then we look at the subject sample. The best I found was seven people. Thats right folks, seven. I ask you, does seven subjects result in statistically relevant data or good results? I would accept maybe twenty but even that seems too little really. More like one hundred samples may get us into the ballpark of real results. Lets use 200 as a real starting point. Also; my cable TV now has a nice black band running across the top of the picture about an inch think. Everyone has a flathead.
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Re: More funny life [message #2835 is a reply to message #2832] |
Mon, 13 March 2006 13:38 |
Manualblock
Messages: 4973 Registered: May 2009
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Illuminati (13th Degree) |
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I once had to deviate the hardened concrete from the inside of the mixer at the rental yard. Boy if you never poured concrete; you are in for a surprise. Better work fast. I wish some of this illogical thinking on the part of the engineering studies majors could be divested so that we could really have a substantive dialogue surrounding the concept of finding what sounds good. They are rooted in procedure and cannot understand that measuring the temperature of water doesn't tell you how big the ocean is. Why is it you can have these kinds of dialogues with Math majors and philosophy majors and astronomy majors; but anyone who has been trained to do engineering has a closed and locked mind. I had an opportunity to speak to Ed Duda; the original design engineer for Lafayette and he still swore to me that all capacitors sound alike and a person would have to be an idiot to spend more than a buck on a capacitor. Look it's right there on the scope; no distortion. They have to sound the same then.
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