Time spent on hard drive housekeeping

I am currently spending a lot of time on hard drive housekeeping. I got a new computer, which is great, but now I am consolidating two libraries, a full and high rez external hard drive for WMP and my mp3s for iTunes.

So I am spending about 30 minutes a night making sure that every album has cover art and that they are in the right genre and so on and so forth.

It is a pain. And I end up doing it when the drives are stable too. About 10 minutes a night then.

Am I alone in this? Is your hard drive demanding?

Trey

Oneohtrix Point Never: Returnal

Oneohtrix Point Never: Returnal

Returnal (Editions Mego EMEGO 104), the fourth full-length release from Oneohtrix Point Never, explodes into the listening room (or out from the speakers or out from the headphones) with real violence and penetrating force. We are thrust into a heavy storm, a maelstrom; we find ourselves standing beneath an ocean of falling glass, falling sky, falling electronic haze. If instruments could scream, their screams might sound like this, like the opening few moments of Returnal, moments that don’t seem like an opening at all, but someplace else, some other time that escaped us, that started without us, before we were ready. I don’t mean scream in the way that guitars and saxophones and other instruments can and do scream. I mean that if instruments could be dealt such pain that they were brought to life, given sentience, to wail with wonderful suffering, it might sound like this, like the opening few moments of “Nil Admirari.”

Shelf strength

I am building a new house and want a minimalist display for my audio equipment. At this point the walls are just framed, so I have access to do whatever I need to do. I have a MMF turntable, Cayin tubed amp and CD player, plus a small pre-amp for the turntable.

I am thinking about having two wide shelves, like two inch thick blocks of wood, just sticking out of the wall. TT and Amp on the upper shelf. I am concerned anything I construct may dip - even a tiny dip would look bad.

The 2010 CEDIA Show: Day 3

The 2010 CEDIA Show: Day 3

Looking back at the 2010 CEDIA Exposition, I was struck by a couple of new products which, I hope, presage a rethinking of modern electronics design. Today, the streaming of program content can be accomplished by TVs, by Blu-ray players, by dedicated servers and, for all I know, someone will put that capability into a speaker system. The result is that, unless one chooses very carefully, one will be buying the same technology redundantly. By contrast, high-end companies have striven to separate their dedicated analog/stereo products from their digital/multichannel products, forcing the very picky among us into a kludgy home-theater-bypass. Again, we end up buying more boxes and interconnections than should be necessary.

The 2010 CEDIA Show: Day 2

The 2010 CEDIA Show: Day 2

I start my second report from the 2010 CEDIA Exposition by returning to <B>MartinLogan</B>. As well as their $2000/pair ElectroMotion electrostatic hybrid that I described in my first report from CEDIA, the Kansas company showed the appealing new 2-way Theos. This hand-built floorstander combines a 9.2"-wide by 44"-tall XStat electrostatic transducer with a 8" aluminum-cone woofer in a bass reflex enclosure. Its large electrostatic radiator and passive woofer can be bi-wired or not with a unique tool-less binding-post design. At $5000/pair, the Theos will be the most affordable speaker in the Reserve Series of floorstanders.

The 2010 CEDIA Show: Day 1

The 2010 CEDIA Show: Day 1

Back in Atlanta's World Congress Center for the second year it is hot (around 90&#176;F) and humid outside but it is cool at the 2010 CEDIA Exposition. On the very first full day, I found a slew of interesting new loudspeakers and that's despite having seen less than a third of the Show floor. Undoubtedly more will be discovered but it is great to say that all of the most intriguing new ones are relatively inexpensive.

Stian Westerhus: Pitch Black Star Spangled

Stian Westerhus: Pitch Black Star Spangled

<a href="http://www.stianwesterhus.com/">Stian Westerhus</a> plays guitar in a band called Puma. Having enjoyed Puma’s latest album, <i><a href="http://blog.stereophile.com/stephenmejias/puma_half_nelson_courtship/">… Nelson Courtship</a></i>, a powerful assault on the senses, I was anxious to hear Westerhus’s solo work. I expected something brutal&#151even something frightening, something perhaps verging on the unlistenable&#151but Westerhus’s second solo LP, <i>Pitch Black Star Spangled</i> (<a href="http://www.runegrammofon.com/">Rune Grammofon</a> RCD 2099/RLP 3099), is something else, something more.

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