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LATEST ADDITIONS

Parasound HCA-3500 power amplifier

Just in case you didn't know this when you bought the Parasound HCA-3500, it says on the cover of the owner's manual: "Designed in California, USA by John Curl." Described as an "audio design legend," an appellation with which he seems quite uncomfortable, John Curl has certainly been around the audio business longer than most. He's been employed by or has consulted for some of the biggest names in consumer and professional audio&mdash;including Harman/Kardon, Ampex, and Mark Levinson&mdash;and was the designer of at least two classic products: the Mark Levinson JC-2 preamplifier and his own <A HREF="http://www.stereophile.com/phonopreamps/640">Vendetta Research phono stage</A>, still considered by many people to be the best phono stage ever built.

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James Michael Wesley

<B>Editor's Note: </B>A reader recently complained that we publish too many obituaries and remembrances on this website. "I don't need to be reminded of my own mortality and depressed at the same time by reading all these death notices," he wrote. "I'm a baby boomer and I don't want to read about baby boomers&mdash;not their work, [not] their deaths."

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Alan Turing

A good read from <I>The New Yorker</I>. I saw a special on the Enigma Project once and they interviewed a woman who had worked with Turing at Bletchley Park. She basically said that everybody at BP was phenomenally bright, but that Turing was a genius and that the difference between being intelligent and being a genius was the difference between going from A to G and from A to Zed. Genius didn't need the intermediate steps that even the very brightest of us require.

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Language Affects What We See

The Sapir-Whorf hypothesis posits that the grammatical categories of the language a person speaks affects how he or she perceives the world. It has been a lightning rod of controversy ever since it was proposed. A new paper suggests that it's half true&mdash;sort of.

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