Audibility of "typical" Digital Filters in a Hi-Fi Playback
Reply #869 – 2014-12-02 15:43:29
No it is not. Yes, it is. No it is not. Or else you wouldn't feel the urge to keep posting and posting and get unprofessional to boot.You defend that position and with your typical amir spiel tried to, once again, shift the burden of proof demanding from others to disprove your position. No I didn't shift the burden of proof. I stated the reality rather than some made up talking points we use to get out of providing a technical explanation. Both sides are in equal position to prove their point in a forum discussion. There is no overriding rule that says you can sit back and let me post and post as evidenced by the fact that you post more than I do on this topic. You are acting as I say, but saying otherwise. That is not logical and I won't accept it as being such. You don't know what my position is anyway. The problem here is not proving a negative, but assuming you are right because there is no strong evidence that your position is wrong. That's a pretty absurd and fallacious position to take, but hey, we're not surprised. Once again you don't know my position so your foundation is wrong. The position I take is very simple and cannot be denied: 1. High resolution audio is coming to market and no one cares how much anyone jumps up and down here. 2. This is not 2007 where we were discussing whether two new physical formats (DVD-A and SACD) had enough merit to force us all to buy all new players and deal with their strict copyright to allow us to make convenient copies. High-resolution files today are 100% compatible with all of our music servers and many appliances. 3. Playing back high-resolution audio has zero, zero cost associated with it. It does not enrich any major company with patents (Sony/Philips or DVD Forum contributors). The notion then that anything good about high resolution audio is motivated by money is totally absurd. 4. The 16/44 is 99.99999% of time a down converted version of a 24-bit higher sampling rate file. Per #3, I don't need anyone to screw around with my bits. If you or anyone else want 16/44, you can generate them from high resolutions stereo master using whatever dither, resampler, etc. you want. I have no reason to follow your preference there, nor does anyone who wants the best quality. I know the best quality will always be a generation up from 16/44. Want the original bits thank you very much. 5. By a miracle, the music labels have decided to license their studio masters to us. You don't see that in movies, do you? This is a gift to be embraced. 6. CD as a format will decline and go away as an option for your music purchases in a few years. There is no longer any reason to stamp plastic and spin it with a motor to read and play digital bits. You will as sure as sun comes out the east, face the situation of wanting your favorite music yet it will only be available in MP3 or AAC. Last night I went searching high and low to find the CD version of one of my favorite soundtrack composers, Max Richter's album: Perfect Sense: Original Film Soundtrack. Yet Amazon only lists the stupid MP3 version. This is the first time I have seen a movie soundtrack skip CD release. Wake up and smell the coffee please. You need to be 1000% in favor of more consumer choice. You don't have to buy high-res but you better join me in supporting it as otherwise we will all be screwed with the first and biggest jump back in fidelity. These are the facts. None of it is impacted by any logical fallacy or debating terms. None of it is impacted of what you think of Stuart's paper or what you think you know about listening tests or signal processing. Don't confuse me engaging you on the technical side as it being my "position" that I have to win such arguments. I just find it fun to turn the tables on people who keep demanding double blind tests exactly that and see them squirm. You squirm because you held an unreasonable position that such tests could not be passed. Well, they have been passed and if that is what you want to base your belief on it instead of the reality of the marketplace, then you suffer and must defend your position. The burden is on your shoulder and big time. Don't go responding to this post because per above, you don't matter. AJ doesn't matter. Krab doesn't matter. None of you do. Get a sense of reality, conduct yourself more professionally and join the audiophiles elsewhere in increases the choice of formats we have. Heaven knows I am getting bored interacting with you all.