Aerich said:Ah, didn't catch that context. I must've been skimming a bit too much when reading through the thread...
Aerich, eh? I wonder, could you say hello to Vlad for me?
Aerich said:Ah, didn't catch that context. I must've been skimming a bit too much when reading through the thread...
Good point.. I was thinking that the testee providing their favorite ( oft listened to ) selection was a nice touch, and that digging up two copies could conceivabley be a problem.. ( though certainly not insurmountable )Beer Monkey said:If the Gee Sickos really claim that their product works on CD-R as well, that makes it even more supernatural. The 'pits' on a store-bought CD are actual physical pits. The 'pits' on a burned CD-R are simply patches of dye that have been turned a darker color. Amazing that this technology can move both kinds of 'pits' around in a pleasing way, even though they are completely different physical constructs. Surely this thing can sharpen razor blades, and cure your asthma too.
Diogenes said:Good point.. I was thinking that the testee providing their favorite ( oft listened to ) selection was a nice touch, and that digging up two copies could conceivabley be a problem.. ( though certainly not insurmountable )
We could revisit the GSIC claims and see if CDR's are covered..
If the public delves deeper, the comments about various types of capacitors may be seen as either the upper echelon of exotica or dismissed as quackery. For it is only you who can decide how for down Alice's proverbial rabbit hole you will travel. At what point do you stop believing the apparent hype? Worse still, if you go all the way down the rabbit hole yet hear no difference, do you begin to question your hearing ability or the resolution of your music reproduction system. So ask yourself, is there a limit to your belief system? Or in the words of Howard S. Bacon, "The amp is a fools trap, money down a rat hole." Of course in the end what really matters is that we all....
Description/Theory: The Intelligent Chip is a "new generation," high-tech device that corrects a particular problem inherent in all commercial CD/DVD/SACD discs, including movies and video games. This problem is produced by slight fluctuations in the master clock(s) when pressing the disc. This "clock fluctuation" problem (jitter) is one reason why consumer digital discs frequently "don't sound quite right," or have a "high-frequency edge."
The Intelligent Chip is a thin, orange 1x1.5 inch rectangular wafer that automatically upgrades the disc in the player when the Chip is placed momentarily on top of the player above the spinning disc. The upgrade itself is virtually instantaneous - and permanent - the sound and picture of the upgraded disc more closely resembling the original master recording. The Intelligent Chip corrects the clock-fluctuation problem within 2 seconds, resulting in sound that is clearer/less distorted, with a deeper soundstage, more "air" and lower background noise. This improvement is especially apparent on very good discs.
LostAngeles said:I'm going to add a reccomendation that if anyone's feeling a bit blue and wants a good laugh to read some of the rest of Golden Sound's products.
Googly moogly.
http://www.audioasylum.com/forums/prophead/messages/11100.html ...snip...
The Intellichip carries a (one or more) quantum dot QD which is activated the the CDP’s laser when spinning a disc. It emits photons at NIR (near infrared) or IR which are forced to behave as wave (not as particles) and which modify the CD’s surface by improving its optical transparency, so that the laser “sees the pits and lands betterâ€. The QD carries a number of “charges†which are used up. The chip recognizes a treated CD so that it won’t be activated and use a charge. When not in use the chip has to remain in its protective housing, made from a non-specified transparent plastic material. A material analysis has shown that the dot (or its support structure) contains Niobium.
...snip...
jj said:Aerich, eh? I wonder, could you say hello to Vlad for me?![]()
Darat said:...
Er.. er... er... well we knew it had to be quantum didn’t we?
...
Frankly, if I were testing the geesick, I'd just want two discs, verified bit-for-bit identical, one treated. Play them for me in random order (ABBABABBABABBABAB, etc). I should be able to pick out the treated disc every time it plays. [/B]
jmercer said:I'm sure he can... just don't ask him to invite Mario over for dinner.![]()
Moose said:It's been discussed before, but this is not a good idea.
Two problems:
1) Someone in the presence of the applicant must know which disk is which (not necessarily which is treated, just which is which) in order to either record the order in which the disks were played, or to play the disks in the prescribed order. If this is somehow signalled to the claimant, the test becomes a 50-50 coin toss.
2) If either of the disks can be marked so they can be distinguished, again, it becomes a 50-50 coin toss.
Bad mojo either way.
The protocol LostAngeles is considering doesn't care if the applicant can distinguish between disks (so long as treated-nontreated is properly blinded), nor does it care if the applicant handles the disks, or sees the equipment.
You really only need to isolate the treaters, the mover, and the testers during the test.
LostAngeles said:... a plank suspended over a pool of man-pirhanas that they'll be walking.
LostAngeles said:Alternately, the treaters set them up in a multidisc player. Unfortunately, the kind of mutlidisc player we'd need for this would be pretty big.
jj said:Aerich, eh? I wonder, could you say hello to Vlad for me?![]()
Moose said:How do you keep the claimant from knowing if you've switched disks, or not switched disks?
Seriously, it's a lot easier in the long run to have multiple disks, treat them (or not) in isolation from the claimant, then simply hand them all over and let the claimant sort 'em out at their liesure.
Blank write-once CDs are dirt cheap these days.
LostAngeles said:I was thinking like an N-disc CD changer where the treaters mark down that 1-A 2-A 3-B 4-A...N-B. My problem there wasn't just money, but how easy it is to screw up the order.
1) Someone in the presence of the applicant must know which disk is which (not necessarily which is treated, just which is which) in order to either record the order in which the disks were played, or to play the disks in the prescribed order. If this is somehow signalled to the claimant, the test becomes a 50-50 coin toss.
2) If either of the disks can be marked so they can be distinguished, again, it becomes a 50-50 coin toss.
Moose said:*grin* Which is why you need the ultimate in high-tech gadgets: a felt tip marker suitable for writing on CDs.
The treaters simply label the 12 CDs 1 through 10, untreated control, and treated control, as appropriate, while recording the states of disks 1 through 10.
Then drop the lot into the lap of the tester, who can sort 'em as he/she/you feel(s) like.
The fewer restrictions one can place on the tester, the better the test.
And remember, JREF doesn't (or at least shouldn't) really care how you detect 'em, just that you can detect 'em without cheating.