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Waiting to see if my new subscription arrives before I buy it. Usually you buy it and that day one comes in the mail. Boom!
The July 2011 issue of Stereophile is now on newsstands. A quick look at the cover should tell you a lot about what the issue has to offer: New speakers from Sony, Thiel, Rethm, Audience, and Harbeth; integrated amplifiers from NAD, Micromega, and JoLida; digital file players from Decibel, Pure Music, and Amarra; a state-of-the-art preamplifier from Ypsilon; a new set of Robert Johnson 45rpm discs.
In order to put together an interesting and competitive issue, John Atkinson strives to create a magazine that he would want to read. Taking a look at this issue’s cover, I feel fairly certain that were I to come across it on some newsstand, I would pick it up, flip through its 140 pages, take it over to the cash register, plop down the $6.99, take the lovely thing home with me, and devour it.
You?
Inside the magazine, John Marks argues that the ranking of music is a personal thing. This seems obvious, but so many seem to think otherwise, seem to think that their opinions should be held by all. Silliness. While life would certainly be simpler if we all agreed on the greatest composers or greatest bands or greatest loudspeakers, life would also be less worthwhile. If Stereophile could remind you to appreciate differencesin opinion, as much as in soundto remind you to enjoy life, to live a full and open life, to surround yourself with beautiful and meaningful things, to share your enthusiasms, to reevaluate your prejudices, to be surprised, to wonder, then I think we’d be doing an okay job.
This is music we’re talking about, after all. Music: the most wonderful, most mysterious of all forms of art, humankind’s greatest achievement, the sound of our days and nights. Why shouldn’t we indulge in it?
Waiting to see if my new subscription arrives before I buy it. Usually you buy it and that day one comes in the mail. Boom!
Just from looking at the magazine cover, it looks as if Sony spec'd the mids from Wilson Audio.
I remember the M-9's? (just guessing) that came out in 1997. Those had some pretty decent reviews.
Nope, I think those are Danish drivers, they appear to be Scan-Speak.
The mids were not sourced from Wilson. Wilson does not manufacture drivers.
The mids look for both the Wilsons and the Sony appear to be sourced from a Revelator sliced-paper cone design made by Scan-Speak.
how come I can't download my iPad version from Zinio yet? I should be able to get this before paper issues hit the stands...
Expecting to be able to read Kal's latest Music In the Round, I subscribed to the digital edition. But I was only able to view the June issue. Apparently, they are still "protecting" their print edition. If that is the case, I disagree with their policy.
Jeff
On AVS Forum, Kal reports that the print and digital usually "arrive" within days of each other. So, I need to exercise patience .. and have another grasshopper...
Jeff
"Within days of one another" is a relative term. it could be a week or a fortnight.
Moreover, given that they are going from an electronic version of the layout to a print version, there is virtually no reason why the digital version cannot be made available on exactly the same day as the print version, if not before.
My print copy arrived today. FWIW.
Kal
Hi Stephen,
In future, may I suggest that the new issues are announced on the web site on their official release date rather than frustrating your digital subscribers with the announcement that an issue is available to everyone but them?
Just some customer feedback for you. Hopefully, Stereophile is committed to meeting the needs of it's customers.
Why hasn't someone with say... an audiophile magazine thought of hosting a regular article (with pictures) that does for audio what OG0-091 ASC-094 ST0-058 JN0-532 JN0-541 HH0-220 ITIL 412-79