can I get some extra "plasticky" on mine please?...
Someone isn't a troll purely for having a different point of view.Not true. One day our trolls will show us the X-Factor, to our lasting shame.
Lack of irregularities that give a speaker some character? I changed back from my recently purchased set of KEF R3s. Lots of character with the other commercial ones despite virtually (by DSP) identical frequency response. Many people think they like some music, but after looking deeper into it using a more clear speaker, it isn't that shiny anymore. It was anyway used to make the speakers sing, not having "it" in itself.So, what is it that would cause this? I'm sure this is a measurable phenomenon.
… and who knows if we live to see it, let alone our grandkids.Not true. One day our trolls will show us the X-Factor, to our lasting shame.
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Now that Snake Oil companies have hired top scientists, it's just a matter of time.… and who knows if we live to see it, let alone our grandkids.
What nuance was that?I forgot, it is pointless to use nuance on the internet. I'm sorry for trying.
I would be content if they would stop playing stupid with this "oh, science can't tell everything"-argument and go with the aforementioned "I just WANT to believe and there is nothing that can convince me to change my opinion".Not true. One day our trolls will show us the X-Factor, to our lasting shame.
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Yeah. I'm not sure I care what they think they hear. As long as we aren't called upon to research it. Somehow, it always heads that way.I would be content if they would stop playing stupid with this "oh, science can't tell everything"-argument and go with the aforementioned "I just WANT to believe and there is nothing that can convince me to change my opinion".
Unless you generate some statistical analysis and some standard criteria (here no one even knows how to define „plasticky“) let alone some control, yes there is absolutely no science whatsoever behind random internet quotes.Someone isn't a troll purely for having a different point of view.
There are plenty of people on this forum that haven't put out papers, haven't added to the science, and do not fully understand what they are espousing, yet they are "defenders of the faith", so to speak. It may not be a faith on the whole, but it is a faith for them as an individual, as they do not understand its workings, so they have to take things as read.
My argument is not one made from a position of claiming to know much at all about audio science - it is a purely logical one, in that we shouldn't dispel things just because they come from a subjective, rather than objective observation. I am not claiming that the subjective is in and of itself true, but that it has the potential to represent something that can be understood by the science, and should not just be blanket dismissed.
There is a narrowness of mind to certain commentators here where they will not even accept the possibility of subjective observations having some kind of validity. What is scientific about such a position? I think they misunderstand what science really is.
is baiting a hook on the internet, science? - if so, "plasticky" is very real......yes there is absolutely no science whatsoever behind random internet quotes...
I didn't say there was science behind it, more so it could be the beginning of an understanding. I don't know how plasticky is less of an acceptable term than boomy or tizzy, purely because it is new to the lexicon?Unless you generate some statistical analysis and some standard criteria (here no one even knows how to define „plasticky“) let alone some control, yes there is absolutely no science whatsoever behind random internet quotes.
To directly answer your question, it's not possible to know what the word means because it has no meaning in this context.This is what I was trying to sus out the entire time. There's nothing in any spins or auxiliary data I've seen that would indicate this, but it's a recurring subjective experience across multiple unrelated groups. All I want to know is what I should even look for in measurements.
Instead I was shouted down, which I gotta say, didn't love that.
This paragraph makes sense if you're talking about random audiophiles. For professionals, relying on taste that you can't even communicate is indefensible.Come on people, it’s mostly about taste. Some people like a particular speaker while someone else doesn't, and even if the description of why they don't like the speaker isn’t scientifically approved, it doesn't mean it must be something they imagine. Maybe just lack of words to better describe what it is they don't like.![]()
Totally a question. Hence the question mark. Another question: Differences in time will affect the envelope (attack, decay, sustain, release) of the sound, thus the frequency. Thus changes it the timing of compression settings are frequency changes, so if two different speakers are neutral in their FR they will sound the same for given compression settings?Is that a theory or a fact?
Compression settings are not only functions of volume, but just as importantly time. What measurements are required to determine which speakers can best articulate the audible differences between a 10ms attack setting and a 5ms attack setting?
Your argument is against the subjective language used, that it is too loose, not that they cannot communicate. Studio engineers use a lot of loose language that has meaning between engineers. Where is the failure here, that it is too ill-defined? Perhaps on ASR it is too ill-defined, but it seems to get the job done well enough in that arena. The context matters.For professionals, relying on taste that you can't even communicate is indefensible.
Yeah, that must be it. Your arguments would make perfect sense to native speaker.I think it would be helpful if people appended their first language to their profile because, without wanting to be rude, it is often a waste of time debating with someone whose first language isn't English, purely for misunderstandings alone. I wouldn't go onto a German forum and try to do so with my faltering German. There must be quite a difference in culture, as I wouldn't argue with someone in their language about topics of any depth, unless I knew my understanding was practically that of a native. There is nothing wrong with asking someone to clarify their point, if you are not entirely sure.
This paragraph makes sense if you're talking about random audiophiles. For professionals, relying on taste that you can't even communicate is indefensible.
One of the biggest differences between a good professional and a mediocre one in pretty much every technical job is the ability to communicate challenging and complex details clearly.
Have you asked these people what they mean by plasticky? Getting them to define the term would be a useful first step. Also, how can their be an excess of frequencies?Your argument is against the subjective language used, that it is too loose, not that they cannot communicate. Studio engineers use a lot of loose language that has meaning between engineers. Where is the failure here, that it is too ill-defined? Perhaps on ASR it is too ill-defined, but it seems to get the job done well enough in that arena. The context matters.
These terms may have significant meaning that translates across individuals. You pooh-pooh them because instead of saying something like a '2db peak centred around 2khz', they instead might say nasally or forward. Will anyone argue against the idea that a 'forward' speaker is one that either has, or is perceived as having, an excess of frequencies in the midrange...if no, then isn't forward an adequate enough descriptor?
These are all on discord servers. Let me dig it up.
using expensive professional near-field studio monitors to listen to the background music while sitting on a computer is a real snake oil.