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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
So you think you ears are good...really ?
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<blockquote data-quote="fuz940510" data-source="post: 634058" data-attributes="member: 16289"><p>Same can be said of many subjects. </p><p></p><p>Food, for instance. Some people just adore McDonalds and KFC, i'd rather get shot in the foot than have to eat it. Yet, we don't use the absolute purest ingredients at home, or measure everything to the milligram accuracy. Does this make it any worse? I don't think so. Does going to a high-priced restaurant automatically make the food amazing? Certainly not.</p><p></p><p>Then, with home audio, why should there be a standard? If they enjoy it, and you don't, then don't listen to it. The point is the music, not the equipment.</p><p></p><p>You are trying to apply your own standards to everyone, which will never work. There is no metaphorical, generic yardstick for audio. There is that oft quoted phrase: "There's no accounting for taste"?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="fuz940510, post: 634058, member: 16289"] Same can be said of many subjects. Food, for instance. Some people just adore McDonalds and KFC, i'd rather get shot in the foot than have to eat it. Yet, we don't use the absolute purest ingredients at home, or measure everything to the milligram accuracy. Does this make it any worse? I don't think so. Does going to a high-priced restaurant automatically make the food amazing? Certainly not. Then, with home audio, why should there be a standard? If they enjoy it, and you don't, then don't listen to it. The point is the music, not the equipment. You are trying to apply your own standards to everyone, which will never work. There is no metaphorical, generic yardstick for audio. There is that oft quoted phrase: "There's no accounting for taste"? [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
General Discussion
So you think you ears are good...really ?
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