Why not just roll a die? If you get 6, you buy the damn thing..Rather than reading reviews ; Find out who designed the speakers and under what conditions.
Come on now. Use proper methodology. You must use two die, and you are looking for lucky number 7. Too many 6's in a system and you could end up with a 666 listening experience.Why not just roll a die? If you get 6, you buy the damn thing..
you could end up with a 666 listening experience.
Come on now. Use proper methodology. You must use two die, and you are looking for lucky number 7. Too many 6's in a system and you could end up with a 666 listening experience.
By what conditions, I mean what market conditions or corporate decisions, rather then their own criteria. I am sure Genelec must be great but they are designed for small studio mixing rooms. In other words, headphones at a near distance.Genelec's people work in a really nice place in front of a lake. Do you mean this kind of conditions?
How do we find this out then? Please don't say the company's website /press release /hifi press.By what conditions, I mean what market conditions or corporate decisions, rather then their own criteria. I am sure Genelec must be great but they are designed for small studio mixing rooms. In other words, headphones at a near distance.
I mean imposed marketing conditions.Genelec's people work in a really nice place in front of a lake. Do you mean this kind of conditions?
Genelecs are designed for headphone listening? This is getting more interesting.By what conditions, I mean what market conditions or corporate decisions, rather then their own criteria. I am sure Genelec must be great but they are designed for small studio mixing rooms. In other words, headphones at a near distance.
By what conditions, I mean what market conditions or corporate decisions, rather then their own criteria. I am sure Genelec must be great but they are designed for small studio mixing rooms. In other words, headphones at a near distance.
Or me?How does that help me?