Taraxian
Taraxian t1_j92trqt wrote
Reply to comment by Scary-Perspective-57 in I Watched Elon Musk Kill Twitter’s Culture From the Inside | This bizarre episode in social-media history proves that it’s well past time for meaningful tech oversight by Hrmbee
You know who doesn't like that? Established businesses with investors to answer to
Taraxian t1_j92tphl wrote
Reply to comment by Arkeband in I Watched Elon Musk Kill Twitter’s Culture From the Inside | This bizarre episode in social-media history proves that it’s well past time for meaningful tech oversight by Hrmbee
Even when someone links a Musk tweet from here you get this routine "Did he delete it?" "No you have to hit refresh a bunch of times before it loads"
Taraxian t1_j92tlvy wrote
Reply to comment by whatweshouldcallyou in I Watched Elon Musk Kill Twitter’s Culture From the Inside | This bizarre episode in social-media history proves that it’s well past time for meaningful tech oversight by Hrmbee
At that level? Not since like 2013
Taraxian t1_j92tcf6 wrote
Reply to comment by Ihaveasmallwang in I Watched Elon Musk Kill Twitter’s Culture From the Inside | This bizarre episode in social-media history proves that it’s well past time for meaningful tech oversight by Hrmbee
The awkward fact is that right wing accounts get banned more than left wing accounts because they are objectively worse than left wing accounts and creating the perception of "balance" requires actively favoring them
Taraxian t1_j0rtass wrote
Reply to comment by AmbitionForeign9940 in Friendship ended with Moondrop Chu by AmbitionForeign9940
Yeah honestly the whole thing is that once you have a ton of competing products at a price point that low it's natural for everyone to end up collecting a bunch of them as the "flavor of the month" changes, that's just how people work
That's honestly the whole reason you can call chi-fi IEMs a "hobby" and not just, you know, a product
Taraxian t1_iy69ma5 wrote
Reply to comment by alesimula97 in Headphone wizardry by SupOrSalad
>The other two dimensions of "3D audio", front/back and up/down, are illusory information your brain calculates via deduction, based on your personal HRTF -- clever little hacks based on stuff like the shell shape of your outer ear causing subtle changes in high treble frequencies depending on exactly where a sound is coming from (treble sounds coming from behind you get blocked while ones coming from in front get amplified) and making little judgments based on subtle 3D movements and rotations of your head
Taraxian t1_iy5wdfo wrote
Reply to comment by gooftrupe in Headphone wizardry by SupOrSalad
Yeah but all our senses include time
Taraxian t1_iy5w05v wrote
Reply to comment by Taraxian in Headphone wizardry by SupOrSalad
Like, frequency is how fast the magnitude of sound pressure changes, amplitude is how far up it goes before it goes back down, but both those numbers are just derived from one number that's going up and down over time
Failing to understand this is where a lot of audiophile woo sneaks in, like this is why "high-resolution" sound files just means files that can record higher frequency sounds, these two concepts are the same thing
This is the principle behind how a DSD file works and why it has a "bitrate of 1" -- at any given timestamp there's just a 1 or 0 telling you whether the magnitude is currently increasing or decreasing (as opposed to PCM, which directly encodes the 2D image of a waveform we look at, there's a 16 or 32 or 64 bit number telling you what the volume of sound pressure is at any given timestamp)
Taraxian t1_iy5uz36 wrote
Reply to comment by gooftrupe in Headphone wizardry by SupOrSalad
Frequency IS an increase in sound pressure, it's literally a measure of how fast sound pressure changes back and forth (a vibration)
Taraxian t1_iy57xvl wrote
I remember the story about Brian Wilson having them give his dad a fake mixing board with knobs and sliders that didn't really do anything to make him feel included in the production process
Taraxian t1_iy4ziu2 wrote
Reply to comment by FastGecko5 in The future is now by SupOrSalad
Buy an audio interface with an ADC like the Behringer U-Phoria for $40
Taraxian t1_iy4e3pi wrote
Reply to comment by Taraxian in Headphone wizardry by SupOrSalad
I guess technically this makes hearing in one ear a "zero dimensional" sense -- all you hear is a presence or absence of varying intensity with no "position" data -- and stereo sound is "1D"
I.e. all you have is two eardrums that let you judge how far a sound source is to the right or left of you by whether it's louder in your right or left ear
The other two dimensions of "3D audio", front/back and up/down, are illusory information your brain calculates via deduction, based on your personal HRTF -- clever little hacks based on stuff like the shell shape of your outer ear causing subtle changes in high treble frequencies depending on exactly where a sound is coming from (treble sounds coming from behind you get blocked while ones coming from in front get amplified) and making little judgments based on subtle 3D movements and rotations of your head
Which is the whole reason binaural audio works even though it's just recorded with two mics and played with two speakers in your headphones, and why it's so much more instantly convincing when it includes head tracking the way AirPods do
It's also why, even though your ability to hear positional sound is very convincing to the brain, it cannot be relied on without vision backing it up and why the game of "Marco Polo" is surprisingly difficult
Taraxian t1_iy4clfd wrote
Reply to comment by RB181 in Headphone wizardry by SupOrSalad
A lot of audiophile woo can be dismissed by fully internalizing that human hearing is a purely "one-dimensional" sense -- at any given moment the only thing an eardrum perceives is an increase or decrease in air pressure, a single number going up or down, and this one number going up or down over time is what makes the waveform whose varying frequency makes a sound
Taraxian t1_iwev8io wrote
Reply to True by Goldeneye07
Yeah but they haven't "updated" it so you can't use the old ones anymore and have to buy a new model
Taraxian t1_j9l8y01 wrote
Reply to Tube Amp users: how do they differ from Solid State? by GarlicBiscuits
You can simulate a tube amp in software using VST plugins