NaiveSound
Headphoneus Supremus
- Joined
- Nov 8, 2015
- Posts
- 3,178
- Likes
- 619
Is Hugo significantly better in all areas than mojo?
John Franks had an interesting analogy about 'burn-in', in his interview, here:
Thanks, Mython. Great interview. I love hearing the additional technical and design details trickle out, like solving a mystery (of how this unit sounds so fantastic). John mentions that Mojo uses 60 DSP cores. Rob has said Dave uses 166. The Mojo's chip has 90 cores, so others could be used for other functions besides the DAC itself. Interesting,y, the Hugo chip has 16 DSP cores. Not saying more has to be better...not saying.
The Mojo, as far as I know uses an Artix FPGA (to keep costs down). It's the lower of the three other models by Xilinx (with Virtex and Kintex being it's bigger brothers). I have worked with a Spartan 3 in the past. The Spartan 6 can be considered a precursor to the Artix 7.
In fact a Spartan 6 (in terms of raw computing power) stands slightly higher than a Artix 7, even though the later has more Logic Cells thanks to the improved process node (28nm). And so we have the Artix XC7A35T for the Mojo (33280 LC) and the Spartan XC6SLX9 for the HUGO (9152 LC). In terms of power consumption, the Artix has an edge here.
It's like getting two cars which both can reach a max speed of 280km/h, one however does consume less fuel than the other and it's engine has a lower HP overall.
Felix
My second thought to share came up when John was talking about money and the ultimate reason why Mojo was born. He says he is 60 and has enough money. Which I believe. So his motivation was not earning more money, but making people's life better with opening their eyes for quality audio enjoyment. (And making this possible for more people than ever before, with creating a relatively affordable product.)
In my opinion this is why Mojo is so remarkable. Many great products are made, with only one intention behind them: making as much money as possible. Some of the "better", more responsible brands realize, it is not the perfect attitude and they make a compromise and willing to have little less profit so they can invest into their future by reaching more customers with a good but slightly cheaper product, etc. The fact that profit was't the first and not even the second thought of the creators of Mojo makes this product so good, so successful, so lovable and close to perfection.
And thanks to John and Rob (and the team) for bringing such an awesome product to our lives!
Thanks, Mython. Great interview. I love hearing the additional technical and design details trickle out, like solving a mystery (of how this unit sounds so fantastic). John mentions that Mojo uses 60 DSP cores. Rob has said Dave uses 166. The Mojo's chip has 90 cores, so others could be used for other functions besides the DAC itself. Interesting,y, the Hugo chip has 16 DSP cores. Not saying more has to be better...not saying.
Sorry to say that the name we planned to use was Buddy..... not Trojan until Ken Kessler a kind friend advised me that in the USA buddy was famous a brand name for what every young and hopeful guy carries around in his wallet and that usually stays firmly in his wallet for months or even years if he's unlucky or an audiophile like most of us guys were.I'd like to share two additional thoughts regarding this interview with John.
One is the name choosing story. Even though I don't live in the USA, with a little googling I figured out the original name would have been Trojan. Which is also not a bad name, but I tell you why I find Mojo better. (For people who didn't watch the interview, the main reason Chord didn't go for the name Trojan is because it was already used by a big USA brand in different areas, not audio. )
So listening to the concept behind Mojo such as broadening the market and producing different additional modules in the future, the name Trojan completely makes sense. They 'sneek' in to many peoples life with a sweet and relatively affordable product, and with additional modules and having these new people on audio market Chord (and other companies) gain bigger purchasing power. Getting back to my point, I find the name Trojan too direct. So I am happy, it was already occupied by another company. This device with the name Mojo fulfills its original purpose in a much better and elegant way, in secrecy. Mojo the little Trojan horse.
My second thought to share came up when John was talking about money and the ultimate reason why Mojo was born. He says he is 60 and has enough money. Which I believe. So his motivation was not earning more money, but making people's life better with opening their eyes for quality audio enjoyment. (And making this possible for more people than ever before, with creating a relatively affordable product.)
In my opinion this is why Mojo is so remarkable. Many great products are made, with only one intention behind them: making as much money as possible. Some of the "better", more responsible brands realize, it is not the perfect attitude and they make a compromise and willing to have little less profit so they can invest into their future by reaching more customers with a good but slightly cheaper product, etc. The fact that profit was't the first and not even the second thought of the creators of Mojo makes this product so good, so successful, so lovable and close to perfection.
Third thing I really liked in the interview was the explanation why Mojo buttons look as they are. In the UK there are a lot of beaches with pebbles. And indeed it is a good feeling to play with those warm pebbles on a sunny day. And Mojo buttons actually convey the feeling. So thanks to John's daughter for the inspiration.
And thanks to John and Rob (and the team) for bringing such an awesome product to our lives!
Sorry to say that the name we planned to use was Buddy..... not Trojan until Ken Kessler a kind friend advised me that in the USA buddy was famous a brand name for what every young and hopeful guy carries around in his wallet and that usually stays firmly in his wallet for months or even years if he's unlucky or an audiophile like most of us guys were.
Sorry to say that the name we planned to use was Buddy..... not Trojan until Ken Kessler a kind friend advised me that in the USA buddy was famous a brand name for what every young and hopeful guy carries around in his wallet and that usually stays firmly in his wallet for months or even years if he's unlucky or an audiophile like most of us guys were.