Benjamin6264
1000+ Head-Fier
- Joined
- Oct 14, 2010
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"I wanna be a billionaire, so freakin' bad" ♫
"I wanna be a billionaire, so freakin' bad" ♫
Clever, very clever. Wish I had such money to splash at something like that. Anyway UE is doing pretty good after being acquired by Logitech.
I do not think it will be that bad. you will 'mess around' with the running knobs until you get the sound that you fond the best!
Yeah probably. They only seem to have 3 knobs for each earphone. I guess you can only tune the bass,mids and highs based on the sound signature of its orginal sound signature. So it's probably not adjusting, say 10 EQ bands with different frequencies range (with different Q values)
really clever way to make an extra $1000 though. same like JH3A
Yeah probably. They only seem to have 3 knobs for each earphone. I guess you can only tune the bass,mids and highs based on the sound signature of its orginal sound signature. So it's probably not adjusting, say 10 EQ bands with different frequencies range (with different Q values)
really clever way to make an extra $1000 though. same like JH3A
Am I missing something here?
(If) there's only 3 bands to adjust - i.e. the bass, mid, treble, then how is it possible to adjust for 'more bloom to midband, slightly boosted bass, and extra treble sparkle'?
What about for someone whose listening preferences differ from one genre to another? especially in terms of overall presentation
Personally I like a more aggressive and engaging sound for Rock, Hip Hop, and electronic music, while I would want a more mellow and intimate sound for Jazz and Country, and ultra transparent and airy presentation for classical. I'm a geek that would prefer on the fly adjustment rather than initially fixed 'configuration'. For that kind of price, I'd want a portable 'tuning box' with a neutral/balance custom-iem and attachable to my media player