Pursuing the Ultimate Music Experiences

Audio Federation High-Fidelity Audio Blog

Faster Spintricity

A major upgrade, especially for Internet Explorer users, should help things move along even faster than before.

The table of contents is now displayed in a sidebar – but it looks better without it, so once you get comfortable [which most of YOU already are] then I suggest closing it and using the popup version [now looking like an eyeball icon in the toolbar].

Please let us know if you have any feedback.

In a few weeks we’ll be doing another upgrade, and that upgrade will improve the text formatting engine so that it will be closer in appearance to the print magazines [and make it easier for me to create fancier articles, allowing me to concentrate more on the actual writing while looking better at the same time]

Studio Electric spent yesterday here…

… at Audio Federation / Spintricity.

Studio Electric brought [an old pair of] their T3 speakers and EA4 hybrid amplifier and we listened and talked and moved things around hither and thither.

We drove the speakers with the Audio Note Kegon and Studio Electric EA4 amps, We used both the Nordost Valhalla and Jorma Design No. 1 speaker cables, we used the Nordost ODIN and Valhalla power cords, in addition to Belden and Acrolink power cords. We also put the amp on the Acoustic Zen Adagio speakers.

Too much fun.

We are going to write this up – but not in a shootout fashion, and not in a review format, and not in a show report manner either, though probably closest to this than the other two. Probably most like the Audiophile’s Guide to the Galaxy.

We want to let people know what the goals of Studio Electric are, how they are going about achieving them, and in general describe the story behind the people and equipment so that you, or your customer, can get a good idea if this is the kind of speaker and amp you should be putting on your short list.

Oh. Yeah. There will be some photos too.

This should appear in a week or two in Spintricity.

Spintricity being updated soon…

Well, Internet Explorer 8, Microsoft’s latest version of its browser, which many people still use, has come and… well, if you are like us, you had no choice but to upgrade from 7. They kind of folded it in with a security update.

We had high hopes for version 8. Kind of put off putting a lot of work into things until this release came out. But instead, 8 is lagging further and further behind the competition in terms of raw speed.

So, tell… ya… what… we’re… going… to… do.

We’ve rewritten a large part of Spintricity (actually magazines.me) and Internet Explorer (i.e. IE), in the ‘lab’, now works on Spintricity about 10 times faster than it used to. About as fast as FireFox used to. Maybe faster.

Of course, FireFox is now about 3 times faster, and Google Chrome, well, I think we’ve achieved warp speed captain.

This should be up on the website next week sometime, we are hoping.

The Watchmen movie is going to be out on DVD in a couple of weeks. I haven’t seen the movie yet, but I read the graphic novel right before the last RMAF, and the Rorschach character’s way of speaking, his short, clipped way of speaking sentences…. his ‘voice’… was used as the voice for the RMAF 2008 show report.

The movie appears to be popular, so hopefully more people will ‘get it’ if and when they read the show report again.

Maybe next time I’ll wait until AFTER the movie comes out?

Sure. That’ll happen.

So, what is with DVDs now costing $35 (discounted to $20)? Have the music industry moguls taken over the DVD industry now?

Anticipate popularity of downloading free movies from internet to grow exponentially. Rinse and repeat.

Improving High-End Audio's Market Share

The U.S. is a place where high-end audio is shunned. In a culture where we just want to have fun, party and experience the good life as an out-of-control consumer, why high-end audio is not on the top 10 (or even top 100) list of every good American, is hard to fathom.

One answer is a ‘discount mentality’

Another is that quality and aesthetics are not really important to most people here.

Another is that we are currently obsessed with kids. Kids do not want high-end audio

Another is a total lack of marketing – besides Bose there is NOTHING.

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Hopeful signs are:

Teens might be interested in hi-fi [they used to be :-)], why are we neglecting this market segment? Parents will buy kids $$$ cars, why not stereos?.

Nesting and behaving just like one’s neighbors is really important to most people, so once a few people start becoming audiophiles in the ‘burbs, many, many will follow.

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Marketing.

Show suburban families with nice stereos.

Show women liking stereos. Wives are one of our main hurdles – many actively try to sabotage their husband’s high-end audio purchases. We need to market to them directly, like other market segments. We can talk about how music is good for kids brains, helps kids get better jobs, it is cheaper than therapy [or marriage counseling :-)], that is helps bring the family together, share their kid’s music and share their music with the kids, … etc.

Product placement: Unlike on the ‘Friends’ TV show [with Martin Logans] and others [SOTA turntables, etc,], have people talk about them and not just used as a background. And not just in NY apartments.

OK, well, any more ideas out there?

If we get a chance, we will put sample ads up on Spintricity advocating our hobby to the masses. Maybe something will strike a bell and start something snowballing….?

How European High-end Audio Manufacturers can better understand the U.S. Marketplace?

You want to have a distributor in the U.S., but don’t know which one to pick. You may not even know which ones there are, it is not like there is a high-end audio distributor registry somewhere now is there? What is a poor manufacturer (MFR) to do?

One method some MFRs use is to find other quality product lines and see who distributes those. But this doesn’t always work, obviously, because otherwise we would have had no need to have written the previous post. Bad distributors do sometimes end up distributing what were once good brands.

Another is to try and verify a distributor by talking to the other MFRs that the distributor deals with. But THAT doesn’t always work, because the distributor may be slimy, but the MFR that slimy distributors work with are either clueless [they don’t know the distributor is slimy] or they are slimy themselves [and see nothing wrong with the tactics the distributor is using. Hey, takes all kinds…].

Another is to talk with MFRs that have dropped the distributor, see what they have to say. This MAY work, but there are so many personal grudge matches in this little high-end audio market of ours, that this approach will often be useless [and that earful you get may be the truth or it just may be a ready-for-prime-time personal feud that you kind of stepped in and kind of wish you hadn’t…. if you know what I mean ].

Another way, and maybe the best, is to talk to the distributor’s dealer network. If they have few or no dealers, well, there you go – something to think about. If the dealers carry nothing else but the product of this distributor – then you may have the dealer-for-a-day program going on, where they are fake dealers who get good prices and pump up the sales [because everything is going for so cheap] and size of the dealer network for the distributor to point to – but it is all a chimera. If the dealers carry lots of cheap gear, but this one very expensive thing from this one distributor… well…

Look, from my perspective MFRs want a distributor who carries lots of similar-quality brands and who has a dealer network of long-term reputable dealers. Sure some dealers will be a little strange, post all sorts of stuff on their blog at all hours, stuff like that – but the general impression that you want to make on this side of the pond is going to be up to the distributor, and the dealer network, and customers are going to receive this impression – perhaps subconsciously, but they will receive it – and it is really up to you what you want this to be.

We are happy to help MFRs (and dealers) choose good distributors to work with (and we have). We know a lot of people in the industry. We don’t know everybody but we know people who know everybody – but who no doubt would prefer to remain distanced from such open ended offers like this :-O.

We hope the impression MFRs want to convey is one of a long-term stable excellent brand with great products and one that cares about quality and about their customers.

Why?

Well, why not. And then my show reports can be all happy happy like all those others out there.

But somewhat more seriously [or not] …

We Americans do spend money with wild abandon and without a care in the world. Don’t think about whether it makes a heckuva lot of sense or not. We don’t. Unfortunately this trendy spendy attitude has kind of ignored high-end audio quite thoroughly for several decade now.

But wait!

But that will someday all change, because we are a unpredictable lot and not prone to doing what is expected of us – mostly because we just don’t pay a lot of attention to things [and are extremely uninformed about what is expected of us. Unless we watch Fox News, of course].

So, when that day comes, hopefully sometime within our lifetimes [it’d be nice] do you want to be stuck with back-alley dealers? Or up front on Rodeo Drive?

OK, I see this has devolved into sociopolitical analysis of the buying habits of large herds of credit card bearing consumers roaming the wilds of the U.S. Not much fun there.

Next: Mike & Neli’s Manufacturer / Distributor match making service. We’ll have some 31 point forms for everyone to fill out, and then we will find the perfect distributor for every manufacturer. We guarantee there will be lots of ‘happily ever after’s, and tons of little products popping out every, oh, 9 months or so.

Definitely got to end this post… now.