A different circle of hell.None of that is evil. Pol Pot was evil. This is just business. Every high end audio salesman I've ever met has been personable, friendly and helpful. But I still wouldn't trust them to hold my wallet.

A different circle of hell.None of that is evil. Pol Pot was evil. This is just business. Every high end audio salesman I've ever met has been personable, friendly and helpful. But I still wouldn't trust them to hold my wallet.
This is just business. Every high end audio salesman I've ever met has been personable, friendly and helpful. But I still wouldn't trust them to hold my wallet.
A different circle of hell.
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Off topic. Amazon deciding to close DPReview made me almost as sad as when learning that someone I admire was dying.
I don't know of any internet resource that has the camera comparison tools as DPReview (IE they have ISO comparisons of same test subject for every camera). It's one thing that they're laying off all the staff, but to delete the whole website? Amazon is one of the biggest network/cloud services company: I don't think it would really eat into their profits to have a locked backup of the site up and running.I saw that too and felt super disappointed. The posters there could get to the gist of what are the good or better cameras and photo softwares and how to use them in a way that was very engaging and informative. I don’t know what resource could ever replace it. Do you?
To sort of steer this on topic, I think one thing that makes photography tech easier to gauge than audio tech is that your eyes can a/b differences in performance very easily and accurately, and if you really want to freak out over that last ounce of performance, you blow stuff up to the pixel level or higher, even though such differences might not be visible at the at normal viewing distances or magnifications. So you don’t really need a carefully planned ABX to figure out what camera or software is working better. DPReview and its reviewers and community handed this type of info to folks on a silver platter. So there isn‘t this cottage industry of photography pseudo-science and false or misleading marketing of the type you see in audio.
I think one thing that makes photography tech easier to gauge than audio tech is that your eyes can a/b differences in performance very easily and accurately, and if you really want to freak out over that last ounce of performance, you blow stuff up to the pixel level or higher, even though such differences might not be visible at normal viewing distances or magnifications.
Camera sensors are getting more alike with every brand as far as performance (closer options for high resolutions and equal dynamic range abilities)...so a lot of arguments over brand does seem to be interface (or now advancements with AI track focusing). There are inherent differences as far as picture quality given sensor size and resolution (or preference for less resolution to get higher burst speeds). Ken Rockwell's site is a good reference for used camera gear, though sometimes you do have to weed through his particular tribalism towards a brand. He'll also generalize to a point that annoys photographers (IE he got the ire of many when he said RAW wasn't needed: maybe not for his own shooting style, which is high key, oversaturated). I had one interaction with him. In his review of the Canon 5D, he went ad nauseam about how if he set the camera to ISO 50, he couldn't see a difference compared to 100. Being a 5D owner myself, I showed him documentation about how ISO 100 is the camera's base ISO...and (like other cameras) if you expand ISO in menu settings, that ISO 50 is a software interpolation. He thanked me, don't remember if he updated his review.I always followed Ken Rockwell. He's got a fun personality and provides solid information. His conclusions sometimes skew to his own use case, but that is true of every reviewer. The thing I like best about his reviews is that he talks about actually using cameras for what they're intended for, not just shooting test grids and bracketing experiments. He also points out when minor differences just don't matter in practice.
In both cameras and home audio, the thing that gets overemphasized are tiny imperceptible differences in image or sound quality, and huge issues involving the user interface and practical application get totally ignored. I see a lot of people jumping through hoops putting up with incredible inconveniences, just for the sake of a tiny quality improvement that would never make any difference in everyday use.
Rockwell is absolutely correct when he says an iPhone in your pocket is better than a whole bag full of gear in the closet at home.
That’s not uncommon. Rob Watts also “helps design the products” and there are/have been many others but their role is also marketing. It must be assumed in these cases that they’re deliberately lying because if they were really as ignorant as their marketing claims/assertions indicate, it’s hard to imagine how they could ever get any of their products to actually work.Not Paul, he helps design the products as well -
Isn’t the ability to project the image of being “a nice guy” pretty much a requirement for a career con-man/charlatan?he's actually a nice guy whatever you think about his support of products that you may think are dubious …
No, the default position on this forum is that someone associated with an audio manufacturer who disseminates false information in order to promote their products is an evil charlatan.Is there some default position on this forum that anyone associated with an audio manufacturer is an evil charlatan?
I have an iPhone 12. While it's better than nothing, it's not at all as good as my 5D4 for shooting images. It's terrible for anything low light and you want to print (I find it likes to posterize the image, terrible grain, and it's hard to control camera shake vs a large physical camera). It is nicer that it's a small recording 4K Dolby Vision video. But my 5D4 has much larger sensor, more MP, better dynamic range. It might cost a lot more as far as having to collect lenses along with an expensive dedicated body. But I do then have more flexibility in framing, editing, and crop-ability of image.The funny thing about his 'tribalism' (the word of the day) is that it's gone back and forth. When Canon builds a camera with poor ergonomics, he becomes a Nikon fan, and when Nikon comes out with a convoluted menu, he becomes a Canon fan. And he's a Fuji fan for family pics.
I've done a lot of work with jpegs and he is right that raw isn't really needed. A jpeg with decent data rate is plenty flexible for just about any image editing task you'll run across. To a professional photographer, speed and capacity are paramount. Most people don't shoot with digital cameras like Ansel Adams. They want responsiveness when they push the shutter. People who need raw are the exception, not the rule nowadays. Those that insist on raw do it for the same reason people want HD tracks... for the *potential& that more data *might* mean more info to assuage their OCD, even if it really doesn't matter in practice.
Rockwell's best articles are those about people who spend all their time shooting test grids and their feet and never go out and actually shoot any real pictures. I see that same thing in audio forums. People worry about specs that don't matter and end up building ungainly portable rigs that require a fist full of cables to connect all the components and battery packs together. Chasing phantom sound causes them to create a rig that's not at all practical for actual use. Rockwell is absolutely correct when he says an iPhone in your pocket is better than a whole bag full of gear in the closet at home.
Indeed you do, and hardly for the first time!I stand corrected!
It’s disappointing but not surprising. Other audiophile communities/websites/publications have effectively done the same thing and long before Head-Fi’s TOS point 5.That's very surprising and disappointing.
They won’t ban you. If your mention of ABX isn’t challenged/argued, nothing at all will happen, if they are challenged, they’ll just delete those posts.I wonder if I'll be banned for my ABX chats.
The Mamiya RB67 is a film camera, so it's not the same as digital cameras having more resolution at same sensor size. It's also not the same of "needing to use it", as it requires getting film developed (or if you're wanting to edit, have access to a dark room). Digital cameras have been able to get better performance while increasing resolution as the photosites, microlenses, and ADCs improve. Now you have 35mm sized sensors exceeding all the aspecs of medium format film (and you have small cinema cameras able to fit the cockpit of a F-18 that has resolving power rivaling 70mm film).I've got an iPhone 13 and I use it a lot more than my Nikons or my Fuji. I get fantastic photos with it, and they're of sufficient quality for everything except perhaps printing out at sizes larger than 11x14. It helps to adjust settings in the phone, rather than depending on auto everything. It's also best to compose your photos in camera rather than cropping a lot in post. You can get it a lot closer that way. If you're not shooting fast, like with sports, there should be time to do that.
My highest resolution camera is a Mamiya RB67. I can't remember the last time I needed to use that.
I was going to be a professional photographer at one point in my life, but that changed. Most people who buy fancy digital cameras aren't pros and jpeg suits them fine. Pros use raw primarily because publishers require that, not because they often bump into not being able to adjust the image settings far enough.
You probably haven't read Rockwell lately, he favors Canon now and has for several years.