Acceptance Factor in Full Effect
I walk in from the kitchen to find her crouching behind a loudspeaker, inspecting the binding posts, it seems.
I walk in from the kitchen to find her crouching behind a loudspeaker, inspecting the binding posts, it seems.
Here's a weird one. I was recently going through CDs that sit on my shelves, in my collection so to speak, and for kicks I decided to check how much a random handful were worth on Amazon. Perhaps it's my naivet, but to my very great surprise, many were out of print. So let me get this straight, a business that needs catalog pieces right now as much as ever is allowing a significant portion of their holdings go out of print? Wow! I was at a party recently where I overheard this: "So do the big labels want to go out of business or is there another plan?"
24 craft beers you should be drinking. Hey, it's a list and it's beer. Double the pleasure.
Ian Pindar reviews William Rosen's <I>Justianian's Flea: Plague, Empire, and the Birth of Europe</I>, in which a "flea looms as large as an emperor." Sound like an unlikely read? Apparently not.
With just one day to go until HE2007, we present our last hi-fi tease: The story of the Edison Tone Tests.
<a href="http://www.gspr.com/index.html">Gordon Sell PR</a> has added a new client to its already impressive roster. Proclaim Audio of Durham, CT, is absolutely new to me, but I will take the opportunity to get to know the company during the Home Entertainment Show.
<I>On An Overgrown Path</I> posts a fine (and balanced) appreciation of Reginald Goodall.
That's the life for me!
<i>I'll break something, I swear to God! Maybe one of Newton's laws. You've got all the distance of uncertainty simmering in your drawers.</i><br>
—Jim Teacher in "Mad Flo"
Thomas E. Witte tells the story of an amazing photograph—and an even more amazing athlete.