>"I filled my house with wifi connected smart devices, why am I having wifi interference?!"
Is this guy for real?
@thor
Prison time is also just a number.
@Heil_Honkler @coolboymew
Don't be like that man. People were having fun, posting lewd images... don't ruin that.
@coolboymew
I mean, Jesus Christ, even when I was in kindergarden, my first wrist watch was digital.
@coolboymew
Do children even get to see analogue clocks these days?
@mangeurdenuage
I'm afraid that's one cup too many for me to be able to appreciate this.
@VD15
Are the rats by any chance human sized?
@skylar @newt
Having UPS for computer stuff is perfectly fine and recommended.
Having UPS for your hifi stuff is a waste imo. If I have a black-out, the last thing I'm concerned about is being able to play music. But I've already said too much. I'll leave this topic.
P.S. Not the first time I've heard about things not liking UPS power. Some people will blame the UPS quality when this happens.
@Constantine2nd
What do you mean? It's clearly called "Gains". It says so right in the corner.
@RyokoPilled
Then go for Hillary Clinton. Plenty of good choices available.
@skylar @newt
I repeat: you don't need special cables to carry DIGITAL signals.
What does a crappy digital audio cable actually sound like?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kpJ0Wr58AHE
@newt
More than 44.1kHz 16bit makes sense for mastering archiving, but not for end user.
@newt
>24bits definitely adds resolution
Yes, but it's not actually needed. To properly make full use of that added resolution, you'd need to blast music loud enough to incur hearing damage.
@newt
>The idea behind using highres audio is that lowpass filters eat shit, and if you record live instruments at 44kHz
Either you misspoke, or you don't understand how recording digital audio works.
The 44.1kHz of the CD is NOT your audio frequency. It's the sample rate. With that sample rate you're reproducing sounds at as high as 22.05kHz. And there's really not much going up there with even classic music instruments. You're not recording live instruments at 44kHz, cause they just don't produce sound that high (and not even at 22.05kHz). It's why lossy encoders like mp3 cut off with lowpass filters even lower, at 16-18 kHz.
Sure, in theory you get those artifacts, but in practice you don't actually hear them, unless you did something REALLY WRONG during mastering.
@newt
If you think you can hear above 22khz, good luck with that delusion.
Just another random person passing by.
The Alyx Vance must go this way anyway.
Gordon Freeman dies in All Dogs Go To Heaven 2.
I wasn't designed to be carried.
En Taro Igel!
Lift me up, let me go...