Whispering to the Wind

Whispering to the Wind

It must have been at Herald Square, where I was transferring onto the <a href="http://www.mta.nyc.ny.us/nyct/service/bline.htm">B</a&gt;, that I realized JA had left a message on my cell. I couldn't listen to the message below the ground &#151; no service down there &#151; but the display let me know that the call arrived at 7:58am. Why in the world would John be calling me at 7:58 in the morning? It was now almost 8:30. Shit:

Measurment question...

Forums

Aloha,

You know how it is, February 14th, Cupid's Day, a time when spring is in the air and a man's thoughts take flights of fancy as he ponders...hi fi.

So, anyway, I gots a question:

I see the speaker measurements JA does for reviews and it makes me wonder if we could actually end up plotting/inventing a room's frequency response, as well.

Let's say we take all his open air measurements and then compare each speaker's curve to his in-room measurements, and then subtract the differences.

The most important link in sound reproduction

Forums

Loudspeakers are the most important link in the sound reproduction chain. Mainly because, they have the highest frequency response variations, highest Harmonic, distortion, highest intermodulation distrotion, highest spurious responses like chuffing, resonances etc, highest negative effect on other components acting as nonlinear loads. Only badly designed, over driven single ended tubea amps and listenning room effect can come close! kaanseler@gmail.com

The Origin of Funk Is the Chicken

The Origin of Funk Is the Chicken

Or is it? <I>www.moistworks.com</I&gt; is an aggregator site and a darn good one. Here, it explores the relationship between the chicken and funk&mdash;although it does omit the superb "Chicken Stuff" by slide guitarist Hop Wilson. And who could ignore Amos Milburn's rocking "Chicken Shack?" OTOH, any place that posts Swamp Dogg's "Eat the Goose Before the Goose Eats You" is well worth visiting.

Tabletop Fusion?

Tabletop Fusion?

Scientists at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have developed a tabletop particle accelerator that confirms and improves upon an earlier experiment conducted at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) that produced nuclear fusion at room temperature.

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