Macs & iPods 'better than some CD players'
Hi-fi boss promotes 21st century
technologyJames
RivingtonApple
products are so good at
playing music that they sound better than some hi-fi CD players. That's
according to AVI
mogul Ashley James who spoke to Tech.co.uk last
week.James said that although
Apple products like Mac
minis and
iPods
are slightly hard-sounding, they are still more pleasurable to listen to than
some high-end CD
players."Let's have the facts,
and you can bloody well say this: I can think of at least six makes of CD
players that are highly reviewed, five stars and all the blather that goes with
it, that are considerably worse than an iPod," he
said."And I'll tell you how
they're worse. They're so bad that when you put them on you don't want to listen
to them. They're disgusting. The iPod is not perfect any more than the Airport
Express is, but what it is, is so good and so nice to listen to that you don't
find yourself worrying about its
problems.""We took the iPod
nano and we plugged it into the most expensive hi-fi systems. And the music is
slightly hard, if you've got to be critical. But, honestly and truthfully, at
normal listening levels you're never going to say 'I can't stand
that'."Poor
form"But there are
some CD players from prominent manufacturers that are miles worse. They're so
bad that from the moment they're on - if you came into this room with one of
these CD players I'm telling you about - you'd know there was something wrong
with it. You wouldn't know what it was, but you'd just say 'that's bloody
terrible'."But James says that
this is not the case with Mac products, and that any "hi-fi people" who say
otherwise are talking "rubbish". He also commented that hi-fi journalists who
criticise computer equipment and MP3s as sources of music are not being very
discerning."A lot of the
problems are that the equipment they are evaluating is not good enough to play
the music properly. So as reviewers they are making a lot of mistakes. That's
the problem with subjective
reviewing."Ashley James went
on to say that he fully expects hi-fi CD player sales to continue falling until
it gets to the stage that no one at all is buying
them."We've seen player sales
drop and most people we talk to have said the same thing. There are a number of
reasons; the first is that CD player mechanisms are nothing like as reliable as
a hard disk mechanism, unless you use a top loader which nobody wants because
you can put it into an equipment tray. But I wouldn't be surprised if people end
up just buying music from the internet and playing it on their Macs and
PCs."Dying
breedHe added that
CD players will linger for a long time, until CD manufacturers find that the
sales aren't there anymore. You could tell how passionate James is about this,
by the amount of swearing that
ensued:"And then finally the
bloody record companies have done everything they possibly can to f**k music
sales. They're a bunch of complete c***s - and of course all this copy
protection stuff and all this jerking around, it's really done an enormous
amount of damage."Us as CD
manufacturers have had five years of these f*****g w*****s changing the copy
protection five times since 2000, and then every time they do it the CDs won't
play. We wouldn't lose too much sleep if we never saw another CD player
again."tech.co.uk
Posted: Sun - March 11, 2007 at 12:15 PM