What a long, strange trip it's been -- (Robert Hunter)
Aug 31, 2019 at 5:23 PM Post #11,581 of 14,566
I can drink coffee black but I enjoy the added sweetness and creaminess that a small amount of light cream adds.

I have had coffee that tasted like that without the cream but only a few times. That's a bit of heaven when it happens.
 
Aug 31, 2019 at 10:51 PM Post #11,583 of 14,566
Aug 31, 2019 at 10:52 PM Post #11,584 of 14,566
Dude, you live in Arizona. Why not just set the cup in a window? (JK).
I’m crying laughing so hard. Thank you 4that!
 
Sep 1, 2019 at 1:15 PM Post #11,586 of 14,566
I absolutely agree that the flavors of coffee and grapefruit are excellent together. Coffee and pineapple too. :L3000:
Zepanish habit (from the South) that i like in the summer; espresso with sweet (suger/honey) glass with some ice and a slice of lemon, hot espresso in the glass: lovely drink
 
Sep 2, 2019 at 1:40 AM Post #11,587 of 14,566
Haven’t been writing much – give my lack of hand-eye skills it has been difficult for me to type. I just type a lot of Schiit I have to correct. It just goes slow. A few subjects are discussed below.

1. Here is something I wrote a few months ago:

One of the cheap DACs (I recently built) sounded waaaaaaaaaaaaay too *** good. This what I should know after forty some years of building DACs. I have to find out why this cheap DAC if built sounds so good. I do not believe in the engineering paranormal so perhaps I am missing out on some engineering spec. We shall see. More on this as it is revealed.

Further discussion: At any one moment, I have a half dozen or so prototype or experimental converters, or major parts of them laying around. For every dozen I build, there will be a few which apparently sound like ass and a few that appear to be really good. This is how I do things R&D. I build lotsa Schiit. This makes it so when I have a situation where I am really sick like I was six months ago, I can come up with a good sounding Bifrost2.

When it is time for a new product (or upgrade) it is not that I talk to God and let him tell me how to build it now. Instead I assemble it from bits and pieces of my protos which are constantly built. The products do not spontaneously generate. This is exactly what I did with Bifrost2. This is precisely because I build a lot of Schiit and listen to it. It is what I am doing right now. Even though I woke up still not dead again today (sorry Willie), I am listening to Faure’s Requiem, even though I am not a fan of French music.

So, at any moment, there are great, fubar, and insipid protos on my desktop. Will they evolve into Schiit products? Typically it has been portions at most. A large percentage of this stuff goes nowhere. I build all of this stuff to put it in the bank for future use (maybe). This is how I have always done it. Do you, the reader like it when I share what I do? My only reservations are when some speculate that there is a new DAC which Baldr loves, so there is no point getting anything for now, etc. The story on the DAC above is that I am still evaluating it. Nothing paranormal. Single ended, balanced, etc. Just as I am the various other toys I built.

2. Sigma Delta.

Well, it’s not that I hate ‘em. Not even that I feel better when they are not around. It is just that they have spawned a DAC product inflation that has confused users as well as some less informed manufacturers. The fact that the dac parts are distributed with recipes make it so anybody who can read can design a ds DAC, which is why there are so many of them. For example, it may occur to lamer company principals that they may need a DAC, even though it has not occurred to them why they should make the 3,563rd such Delta Sigma DAC on the market. The Tech geek at the company suggests they use accujack capacitors. The marketeer suggests they call it “power gumbo topology”. Thus is born yet another pointless ds DAC.

Now, I’m not sayin’ I am experienced, just old enough to have designed a schiitload of ds DACs since they first came out, primarily as a home theater component, in the very early 90s as I recall. They do not do much for me, much less float my boat. They are usually not offensive, just lacking musical emotion – boring, yet inoffensive. They do have a place!

Where is that place, you say? Well, ever since I made the original Modi DAC for a hundred bucks, I have aspired to make a cheap multibit DAC. Well, that is done, I have made at least three dirrerent cheap multibit design DACs. It is an exaggeration to say they sound like ass; they are just a bit on the bright side. It is my opinion that the ds DACs I have built are less bright than boring. So, what I am saying is that I have yet to make a multibit DAC targeted under a couple of hundred bucks or so that universally sonically beats a DS DAC I can build at the same cheapo price. End of story – for cheapo, ds rules. Above $250, multibit trounces any ds design I have ever heard and I have heard a lot of them.

3. Gadget

Hasn’t been much said about the gadget lately, There are a few of reasons it has not yet been released. The best one is that it is not finished yet. So what is not finished? After all, we demoed one a couple of years ago, no? Indeed, we did but the algorithm was written into an Analog Devices DSP processor, a processor unsuited to allow the algorithm to run properly. It was gimped to fit into what we had at the moment. We got lucky because it demoed well. What we really need to do this right is a much faster, non DSP hardware base. The DSP platforms we build now are suitable for digital filter implementation. The gadget’s as well as a couple of other feature type goodies we have built need to run on a much, much faster platforms which are NOT optimized for digital filters.. Much faster than any other processor which will run openBSD.

We have a requirement for a not quite that fast processor for our upcoming transport. The fact that the processor will have some bonus apps and features will require that speed. At that time we will be much closer to the processor requirements for the gadget/signal processor functions.

The summary is that the gadget is NOT killed, only slumbering while we get there hardware-wise.

4. Me and my health.

I am very much OK from the neck on up, but my body doesn’t quite agree with this Lambert/Eatonish Myasthenic crap. My professor/doctor tells me statistically I am under 1 per million.

Takes me quite a while to type (so far 2 hours on this writing for all the mistakes I make and correct.) The good news is that doing a schematic is much more like normal because it is all mouse based.

Still can barely walk, and I talk like a drunk daily until my medicine kicks in. I have no sense of balance standing, and perfect balance sitting.

Despite it all, I am still building Schiit and enjoying very much doing exactly that. Thank yo all for your continued support!
 
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Sep 2, 2019 at 3:27 AM Post #11,589 of 14,566
Thank you, Mike. Thanks for the time and effort to post and update us. And Thank you for Bifrost 2 -- it is the Bifrost update I was begging for and more!!


(Sending prayers and positive thoughts your way)
 
Last edited:
Sep 2, 2019 at 4:26 AM Post #11,590 of 14,566
MIke, just a bit of input on the dizzy's.
Many are experiencing this now, my SO among them.

It tends to come and go for some, but it does seem to be related to the crazy energies we are experiencing these days.
This has been an ongoing thing for quite a while now, and while walking some are leaning right, others lean left, right into the wall…

And those who have sought medical help have found that the doctors really don't have a clue either.

All these conditions, and our reaction to them, seem to be coming to a head here fairly soon.

Just a heads up of sorts.

JJ
 
Sep 2, 2019 at 6:19 AM Post #11,591 of 14,566
Haven’t been writing much – give my lack of hand-eye skills it has been difficult for me to type. I just type a lot of Schiit I have to correct. It just goes slow. A few subjects are discussed below.

1. Here is something I wrote a few months ago:

One of the cheap DACs (I recently built) sounded waaaaaaaaaaaaay too *** good. This what I should know after forty some years of building DACs. I have to find out why this cheap DAC if built sounds so good. I do not believe in the engineering paranormal so perhaps I am missing out on some engineering spec. We shall see. More on this as it is revealed.

Further discussion: At any one moment, I have a half dozen or so prototype or experimental converters, or major parts of them laying around. For every dozen I build, there will be a few which apparently sound like ass and a few that appear to be really good. This is how I do things R&D. I build lotsa Schiit. This makes it so when I have a situation where I am really sick like I was six months ago, I can come up with a good sounding Bifrost2.

When it is time for a new product (or upgrade) it is not that I talk to God and let him tell me how to build it now. Instead I assemble it from bits and pieces of my protos which are constantly built. The products do not spontaneously generate. This is exactly what I did with Bifrost2. This is precisely because I build a lot of Schiit and listen to it. It is what I am doing right now. Even though I woke up still not dead again today (sorry Willie), I am listening to Faure’s Requiem, even though I am not a fan of French music.

So, at any moment, there are great, fubar, and insipid protos on my desktop. Will they evolve into Schiit products? Typically it has been portions at most. A large percentage of this stuff goes nowhere. I build all of this stuff to put it in the bank for future use (maybe). This is how I have always done it. Do you, the reader like it when I share what I do? My only reservations are when some speculate that there is a new DAC which Baldr loves, so there is no point getting anything for now, etc. The story on the DAC above is that I am still evaluating it. Nothing paranormal. Single ended, balanced, etc. Just as I am the various other toys I built.

2. Sigma Delta.

Well, it’s not that I hate ‘em. Not even that I feel better when they are not around. It is just that they have spawned a DAC product inflation that has confused users as well as some less informed manufacturers. The fact that the dac parts are distributed with recipes make it so anybody who can read can design a ds DAC, which is why there are so many of them. For example, it may occur to lamer company principals that they may need a DAC, even though it has not occurred to them why they should make the 3,563rd such Delta Sigma DAC on the market. The Tech geek at the company suggests they use accujack capacitors. The marketeer suggests they call it “power gumbo topology”. Thus is born yet another pointless ds DAC.

Now, I’m not sayin’ I am experienced, just old enough to have designed a schiitload of ds DACs since they first came out, primarily as a home theater component, in the very early 90s as I recall. They do not do much for me, much less float my boat. They are usually not offensive, just lacking musical emotion – boring, yet inoffensive. They do have a place!

Where is that place, you say? Well, ever since I made the original Modi DAC for a hundred bucks, I have aspired to make a cheap multibit DAC. Well, that is done, I have made at least three dirrerent cheap multibit design DACs. It is an exaggeration to say they sound like ass; they are just a bit on the bright side. It is my opinion that the ds DACs I have built are less bright than boring. So, what I am saying is that I have yet to make a multibit DAC targeted under a couple of hundred bucks or so that universally sonically beats a DS DAC I can build at the same cheapo price. End of story – for cheapo, ds rules. Above $250, multibit trounces any ds design I have ever heard and I have heard a lot of them.

3. Gadget

Hasn’t been much said about the gadget lately, There are a few of reasons it has not yet been released. The best one is that it is not finished yet. So what is not finished? After all, we demoed one a couple of years ago, no? Indeed, we did but the algorithm was written into an Analog Devices DSP processor, a processor unsuited to allow the algorithm to run properly. It was gimped to fit into what we had at the moment. We got lucky because it demoed well. What we really need to do this right is a much faster, non DSP hardware base. The DSP platforms we build now are suitable for digital filter implementation. The gadget’s as well as a couple of other feature type goodies we have built need to run on a much, much faster platforms which are NOT optimized for digital filters.. Much faster than any other processor which will run openBSD.

We have a requirement for a not quite that fast processor for our upcoming transport. The fact that the processor will have some bonus apps and features will require that speed. At that time we will be much closer to the processor requirements for the gadget/signal processor functions.

The summary is that the gadget is NOT killed, only slumbering while we get there hardware-wise.

4. Me and my health.

I am very much OK from the neck on up, but my body doesn’t quite agree with this Lambert/Eatonish Myasthenic crap. My professor/doctor tells me statistically I am under 1 per million.

Takes me quite a while to type (so far 2 hours on this writing for all the mistakes I make and correct.) The good news is that doing a schematic is much more like normal because it is all mouse based.

Still can barely walk, and I talk like a drunk daily until my medicine kicks in. I have no sense of balance standing, and perfect balance sitting.

Despite it all, I am still building Schiit and enjoying very much doing exactly that. Thank yo all for your continued support!
Good effort! Keep going is the best indeed. BIG hug, I know a hug doesn't cure but helps!!
And in case you wanna know and it make you feel better; you type faster than my father (he's is from 1943 and the last time he touched a keyboard was just before a virus from strange websites on their laptop)
 
Sep 2, 2019 at 9:38 AM Post #11,593 of 14,566
@Baldr,

Thank you so much for your latest post. I feel badly it was so laborious for you to type. That sucks (thank heaven for mouse-based design applications!).

I hope for the best for you and that your work brings you joy and satisfaction in spite of the new difficulties. (My father has been struggling with health issues lately. It is a daily frustration for him, only it is the inverse of yours: his mind is failing but his body remains strong.) Enjoyed your post very much, the updates on the Gadget and Transport in particular. However, what I found most startling of all is the fact that you were listening to Fauré! Shocking, indeed! :)

Thanks again for writing.
 
Sep 2, 2019 at 9:57 AM Post #11,594 of 14,566
Great to hear from you, Mike. I bought a Modi MB for my son-in-law. It sounds damn good for a $249 DAC.
And, the Bifrost2 is just over the top. You folks will sell a million of 'em.
Maybe a new cane to perk you up. This one's a Harvy ... you'll be wobbling along in style :)

IMG_1030.JPG
 
Sep 2, 2019 at 10:32 AM Post #11,595 of 14,566
Haven’t been writing much – give my lack of hand-eye skills it has been difficult for me to type. I just type a lot of Schiit I have to correct. It just goes slow. A few subjects are discussed below.

--clip--

4. Me and my health.

I am very much OK from the neck on up, but my body doesn’t quite agree with this Lambert/Eatonish Myasthenic crap. My professor/doctor tells me statistically I am under 1 per million.

Takes me quite a while to type (so far 2 hours on this writing for all the mistakes I make and correct.) The good news is that doing a schematic is much more like normal because it is all mouse-based.

Still can barely walk, and I talk like a drunk daily until my medicine kicks in. I have no sense of balance standing, and perfect balance sitting.

Despite it all, I am still building Schiit and enjoying very much doing exactly that. Thank you all for your continued support!

Mike, this better news than the release of Bifrost 2. Health challenges are a new reality, as us old hippies keep on Truckin'.
I love the positive tone and the progress that you are making on various projects.

Thank you for everything you do, take good care, and realize that every day is a blessing...even though sometimes it doesn't seem that way.
 

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