SunTanScanMan
500+ Head-Fier
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2014
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is this legal? in france consumers are protected from that kind of ambiguous warranties, and usually time of delivery(provided by the delivery service) will be what makes the clock ticking, not the buyer, not the seller. I like those guys more and more each day. what amazon does is the right way, or else you don't pretend you have a 30days return policy.
just to be clear do you think those also shouldn't be dismissed?
or this
the crystals will be what? well who cares. that is the answer.
they are around the conducting components. the signal just like my fellow frenchmen will always take the path of least resistance and never go through those crystals. but maybe you think that is also just speculation from a guy on the internet?
and even if I went wild on the open mindness here, let's say the signal somehow does wander around those crystal, if it's quartz, then it will do what? vibrate? let's say it does, the way they are, without a special shape/cut, the vibrations from each rock would be random uncontrolled frequencies. so you can't even make this pass for the water frequency hoax we have in another topic.
and what would a mechanical micro vibration do to the sound in our headphone?
if having the cable to micro vibrate is good for sound, maybe I should just buy one of those and put it on the top of my amp?
not only do they vibrate, but they do in rhythm ^_^
A thought which struck me just now seeing products such as above, is to what extent we can see the consumer as part of the problem. Much of the discussions of this thread, including myself has focused on the company (justifiably in most respects) designing, manufacturing, marketing and selling such products. However, it also follows that people are buying these products. There must be 'music lovers' who in their minds try to attain the last ounce of sonic quality by attaching metal cups to the walls and rocks to cables. I'm guessing they don't have any furniture in their rooms lest they bounce the sound away... How do these people even attend music concerts in halls, without going insane thinking about how the violins don't have dust sprinkled on them, and that other people's ears must be eating the sounds which otherwise they would hear...
I would be equally critical upon such consumers' habits. Perhaps even more so than companies making such products? The market provides what the consumer wants right? I guess this is within a certain degree... I don't doubt the influence of marketing and advertising, as well as peer culture. All this overthinking is slightly unsettling.