Wes Phillips

Wes Phillips  |  Nov 14, 2005  |  0 comments
Obviously, I am not the Geek King after all.
Wes Phillips  |  Nov 14, 2005  |  0 comments
Thrilling proof that some people waste even more time than I do! Sightsee via Google Maps.
Wes Phillips  |  Nov 14, 2005  |  0 comments
Nine "Life Hacks" that will make you happy.
Wes Phillips  |  Nov 14, 2005  |  0 comments
I've read 'em all—does that make me the King of the Geeks? (And shouldn't Cryptonomicon be in first place?)
Wes Phillips  |  Nov 14, 2005  |  0 comments
From the frontiers of neurobiology.
Wes Phillips  |  Nov 14, 2005  |  0 comments
Be the hippest kid on your musical block.
Wes Phillips  |  Nov 13, 2005  |  0 comments
On November 12, the audio forum Head-Fi staged a meet at the Adria Ramada Inn and Conference Center in Bayside, NY. You may be asking yourself, What's a Head-Fi meet? That's a complicated question, but the simplest answer is that it's an attempt to provide a real-world equivalent to the sense of community that Head-Fi's forum has engendered on the Internet. It's also a chance for like-minded enthusiasts to share their favorite equipment and software with one another. In a hotel conference room, some 30–40 headphone lovers set up their systems (frequently incorporating more than one headphone amp and multiple sets of headphones) and then everybody started listening, taking turns around the room, and discussing what they'd heard.
Wes Phillips  |  Nov 13, 2005  |  0 comments
After posting a round-up of the news about Sony BMG's F4i's XCP digital rights management system (DRM), which hid itself inside consumers' computers' root-kit code, I spent a frantic week simply trying to keep up with all of the breaking news on the issue on my blog. During the week of November 7, I posted no fewer than 9 URLs outlining breaking news on the Sony story. However, by the end of the week, the company was reeling from the news that hackers had managed to install malware (malicious programs that dismantle a computer's firewall protection) on consumers' computers that masked its presence by using the hidden software placed there by Sony BMG's DRM system.
Wes Phillips  |  Nov 13, 2005  |  0 comments
Jim Thiel sounded almost bored. "Almost everything about the CS2.4 is pretty standard stuff—short-coil, long-gap, low-distortion drivers, aluminum diaphragms, polystyrene capacitors, spatial coherence, time coherence, reduced diffraction baffles, reduced cabinet vibration, etc., etc. Of course, I think the execution of the 2.4 is more successful than our previous models, but in terms of what's really different, that mechanical crossover is what's special."
Wes Phillips  |  Nov 13, 2005  |  0 comments
"Subwoofers are boring," whined John Atkinson when we were dickering about column inches for my review of the Thiel CS2.4 loudspeaker in this issue. "I know they're important, but I just don't get excited reading about them."

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