rhythmdevils
Member of the Trade: rhythmdevils audio
- Joined
- Feb 11, 2005
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penartur what do you do for a living?
Apple continually takes products that are designed by- and for- software engineers, and makes them accessible to ordinary people. Low and behold, the person who hates apple the most is a software engineer.
Because that's what I was guessing- this will sound repetitive, but I keep saying that Apple continually takes products that are designed by- and for- software engineers, and makes them accessible to ordinary people. Low and behold, the person who hates apple the most is a software engineer.
No offense of course, I'm just saying that it makes sense.
I think that my 2009 iPod Classic + LOD + iBasso T3 sounds pretty damn good let me tell you. I can enjoy greatly the music and the UI, aftermarket and Apple tech support across the street (If needed).
I'm sure that the brick called hifiman would sound a tad better but not enough to negate all the other facts.
@Penartur: I agree wholeheartedly that iPod SQ is wanting; the aforementioned IPod video (the first one I bought, and the best one I've heard so far) still couldn't hold a candle to my 13 year-old Discman, which if memory serves me right cost ~$120 back then, and was the best sounding DAP (if you can call a CD player a DAP, which you probably cannot) I've ever heard. What won me over was not marketing, but the fact that it rewarded me for having picked it up. It felt sexy in the hand like nothing else ever made, and it allowed me to put my hands on my whole music collection with an interface that was legible, uncluttered, snappy, and quickly became an extension of my will. This, as others have said ad nauseam on this thread, was the principal reason for its success. Marketing matters, oh yes it does, and marketing and fashion appeal put it in the hands of more people, first, than the likes of any other manufacturer could ever cope. But what kept it in their hands, and mine, is that they've found a faithful, sexy and uncomplaining companion that requires little thought to operate, and as a bonus feels like a polished ingot mined from the core of Jupiter,
and doesn't sound horrible. I've actually heard (and owned) worse-sounding CD players.
Heck, if I cared as much as I think you do about SQ, then I'd still be listening to that Discman. Or better yet, trying to get my hands on a D-50 or older model---which I think I will, if for kicks. Can't run with the stupid thing.
Show me a DAP with the capacity and footprint of an iPod Classic, and that sounds better unamped than a D-50 or D-555 (^^), and runs on iOS4, and I'll likely be satisfied. (Until someone does something better.)
Only 0.1% of audiophiles are ready to either carry the hifiman brick with them or separate dap + amp.
It could be easily said that 95% of people are cattle (i hope i've picked the right word), and apple tells that cattle what should they want and produces things that cattle purchases only because apple told them to, not because of any real advantages. And yes, the remaining 5% will hate apple for that.
Yowzers. I guess that makes me a blind cow then. If you say so
That's your assumption and your posts are plagued by them. Anyway to me it's clear that you have heavy feelings against Apple. That's ok but do not try to get people on your boat by posting such a bunch of blatant exaggerations and debatable assumptions.
Are you saying that "only very limited number of people are ready to carry a dap + an amp to listen music" is only my assumption?
So, in your opinion, there are many people who'd used dap with an external amp as a portable source?
I'm saying the same about apple. Apple fanboys are saying that itouch has a touchscreen and apps and wifi and games and camera etc, but i'm using a DAP as a DAP, with a sole purpose of listening music. And all apple production does its purpose insanely bad, but instead offers a bunch of bells and whistles.