Donks said:
Sorry Hans, but I disagree. Who said LostAngeles is an "average listener"? We have evidence that LostAngeles can't hear any difference, not even for a milion dollar.
That would be me.
...propose to test the claim that the GSIC (Golden Intelligent Sound Chip) will improve the audio quality of cd's, such that an average listener will be able to notice.
...
Once more around the mulberry bush, we go.
If a device will only work for you if you are an, "audiophile," or a Star Trek fan, or twenty-six years, fifteen days old, or if you have a burn scar from a KFC biscuit tray on your arm, then it's very likely a load of crap. If the GSIC did what it has been claimed to do, then I should have heard something and in the end, it turned out that all I was hearing was hope.
The treated disc, by coin flip, ended up being disc B. When I listend to B, I sincerely thought I was hearing a difference. However when it got to the drums, I noticed that there was none and there wasn't any on the strings either. I wasn't looking for a difference that would be comparable to a T.V. and THX system. I was looking for any. I had them go back to the beginning of the A disc and listened again just to reconfirm that no, there was no actual difference. One of the observers commented that whatever disc was being heard at the time sounded better than the other one that was just heard. Another commented that there was still hissing.
The GSIC was accompanied by clams that it was absolutely amazing. "The difference is astounding and very much there," it was said. Maybe now it just doesn't work on drums and string instruments, but only brass instruments, woodwind instruments, and voices? Hell.
If someone here, who's an audiophile, would like to the test again, by all means, go right on ahead. You just can't have the chip we used for the baseline.
It's in pieces.
