"Motion Denied Because You're an Idiot!"
I do so love <I>The Smoking Gun</I>.
I do so love <I>The Smoking Gun</I>.
In zero-G, doesn't everybody?
My friend Jeff Wong sends this "Beatles Anomalies List," suggesting that it's the audio analog to other obsessions for geeks who need a life—people like me, in other words.
On re-writing unhappy endings.
On the eve of the release of a new DVD edition of <I>Empire of the Sun</I>, J.G. Ballard muses on how strange it can be when Hollywood options your life—or something like it.
While SACD and DVD-A seem pretty much format roadkill, do you have any hopes that the new Blu-ray and HD-DVD formats will use their high-resolution audio capability?
No, you aren't reading an old newsdesk article that has inadvertently been published a second (or third) time. On March 2, congressional representative Mike Ferguson (R-NJ) introduced House Resolution 4861, "the audio broadcast licensing act of 2006." Ferguson's co-sponsors were Edolphus Towns (D-NY), Mary Bono (R-CA), Bart Gordon (D-TN), and Marsha Blackburn (R-TN).
In an article published in <I>The Wall Street Journal</I> on <A HREF="http://online.wsj.com/public/article/SB114117951081886103.html?mod=toda… 1</A>, Ethan Smith suggested that consumer electronics companies need to recapture music lovers who have sacrificed audio quality in search of convenience by embracing portable devices such as the iPod.
Just who does Bruce Rozenblit think he is? And why is he saying those things about the late Julius Futterman? Rozenblit, relying heavily for guidance on his Electrical Engineering degree, has crafted an OTL (output-transformerless) amplifier that flies in the face of contemporary design dogma. To hear Bruce tell it, he's tamed the breed—this is how OTLs <I>should</I> have been done to start with, Futterman notwithstanding.