opaqueice;266406 Wrote: 
> I don't think making absolute statements is very productive - they
> either come across as polemical or simply confuse people.  Well indeed, I 
> agree.

opaqueice;266406 Wrote: 
> In my opinion what should be said is something like this: the
> differences in jitter are at most X, and since Y is the threshold for
> human perception, we do or do not have to worry about it.
> Yes, but the world is rarely black & white, especially where humans are
involved.  It's the kind of thing we get over here all the time, say
when the government tells us that this or that food type contains X
amount of whatever substance, and Y amount is the threshold for what we
need or can tolerate ... then a few years later it turns out that the
scientists were wrong and Y isn't the correct amount after all.


-- 
Patrick Dixon

www.at-tunes.co.uk
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Patrick Dixon's Profile: http://forums.slimdevices.com/member.php?userid=90
View this thread: http://forums.slimdevices.com/showthread.php?t=43087

_______________________________________________
audiophiles mailing list
audiophiles@lists.slimdevices.com
http://lists.slimdevices.com/lists/listinfo/audiophiles

Reply via email to