Handsome Hansen from Canada

Handsome Hansen from Canada

Hansen is a new line of ultra high-end speakers from Canada, using proprietary drivers and said to feature extremely dense, non-resonant enclosures. The company is headed by Lars Hansen, who, as former president of the Dahlquist Corporation, is no stranger to the world of high-end speakers. The sound of the Prince ($27,000/pair, third model from the top) was simply excellent—an auspicious debut, I felt.

Upgrading Quad 99 CDP-1 to Quad 99 CDP-2

Very good review of Quad 99 CDP-2. This unit has a bit of additional resolution compared to the original version 99 CDP-1 and I would like to know the process to follow to upgrade 99 CDP-1 to 99 CDP-2.

I have done some comparisons between two models and depending on price the upgrade might be worthwhile.

Aparently the only difference between them is on the transport side, but seeing both units from inside, flat cables are not completely compatible.

Is there anybody out there who has gone through the upgrade process?

Cheers,

Reasonably priced LP storage

Ever since the local supermarkets stopped using metal milk crates (those plastic ones just aren't worth a damn) I've been at a loss when it comes to finding a reasonably priced and well made LP storage system. Granted the metal milk crates were rather cheap, basically free at those after midnight sales events, but some of the prices charged by the custom furniture builders are simply outrageous. As my dear brother would say "They're not afraid to charge."

Starbucks Sells Rationally-Sized Coffees?

Starbucks Sells Rationally-Sized Coffees?

Make mine a Venti? Give me a break! I once asked a Starbucks counterperson why they called their humongous-sized hot-milk drinks "ventis." "That's Italian for twenty," the barrista said. <I>Riiiight</I>, like any Italian I've ever met would slam down 20 oz. of coffee at a time.

The Desert Libraries of Timbuktu

The Desert Libraries of Timbuktu

This is so cool&mdash;the Library of Congress has posted excellent scans of pages from its exhibit of manuscripts from the era when Timbuktu was not synonymous with "as far away from here as you can get." Nine hundred years ago Mali was a flourishing trade center, serving as the entry point for goods from the Mediterranean and exit point for African trade. And, at the height of the Middle Ages, it was a nexis for scholarship and science.

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