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[-] TheFeatureCreature@lemmy.ca 347 points 4 days ago

I'm lightly active in the headphone enthusiast space. Even in the more light-hearted circles there is still an elevated amount of placebo bullshit and stubborn belief in things that verifiably make zero difference.

It's rather fascinating in a way. I've been in and out of various hobbies over the course of my life but there is just something about audio that attracts an atmosphere of wilful ignorance and bad actors that prey on it.

[-] commander@lemmy.world 124 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

I've been in the audio enthusiast community for like 17 years now. When I was fresh, the internet commentators had me thinking there was some audio heaven in the high end compared to the mid range priced gear. Now I know better and the gear community is not so high end price evangelicals like it used to be. I feel like there was a before and after the $30 Monoprice DJ headphones and the wave of headphones since. Then especially IEMs. Once ChiFi really got rolling with IEMs and amplifiers and DACs, $1000+ snake oil salespeople got to deal in a way more competitive market

Same with speakers. Internet changed everything. No more at the whim of specialty audio stores stock and Best Buys. Now you got the whole worlds amount of speaker brands at a click of a finger plus craigslist/offerup. Also again ChiFi amplifiers and DACs. Also improvements in audio codecs whether for wireless or not. Bluetooth audio was awful until it stopped being awful as standards improved

These days I mostly see the placebo audio arguments in streaming service and FLAC/lossless encode fanboys. Headphone and speaker communities these days seem a lot more self aware and steeped in self-deprecating humor over the cost, diminishing returns, placebo, snake oil they live in today compared to 17 years ago. I want my digital audio cables endpoints plated with the highest quality diamonds to preserve the zeros and ones. No lab diamonds. Must be natural providing the warmth only blood diamonds that excel in removing negative ions. I treat my room with the finest pink himalayan salt sound absorbent wall panels to deal with the most problematic materials used by homebuilders. Authentic himalayan salt has been shown to be some of the highest quality material in filtering unwanted noise and echos while leaving clean pure audio bliss

[-] kabe@lemmy.world 40 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

These days I mostly see the placebo audio arguments in streaming service and FLAC/lossless encode fanboys.

The clamour for lossless/high-res streaming is the audiophile community in a nutshell. Literally paying more money so your brain can trick you into thinking it sounds better.

Like many hobbies, it's mainly a way to rationalize spending ever increasing amounts on new equipment and source content. I was into the whole scene for a while, but once I had discovered what components in the audio chain actually improve sound quality and which don't, I called it quits.

[-] snooggums@piefed.world 91 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

The push for lossless seems more like pushback on low bit rate and reduced dynamic range by avoiding compression altogether. Not really a snob thing as much as trying to avoid a common issue.

The video version is getting the Blu-ray which is significantly better than streaming in specific scenes. For example every scene that I have seen with confetti on any streaming service is an eldritch horror of artifacts, but fine on physical media, because the streaming compression just can't handle that kind of fast changing detail.

It does depend on the music or video though, the vast majority are fine with compression.

[-] otacon239@lemmy.world 36 points 4 days ago

My roommate always corrects me when I make this same point, so I’ll pass it along. Blu-Rays are compressed using H.264/H.265, just less than streaming services.

[-] GnuLinuxDude@lemmy.ml 19 points 4 days ago

🤓☝️ many older blu-rays also used VC1

[-] ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de 7 points 4 days ago

Or worse. I think it was the original Ninja Turtles movie that I had owned on DVD and the quality of it kind of sucked. Years later I got it on blu ray and I swear they just ripped one of the DVD copies to make the blu ray disc.

[-] GnuLinuxDude@lemmy.ml 7 points 4 days ago

Sadly, that basically feels like what happened with The Fellowship of the Ring's theatrical cut blu ray, too. It just doesn't look that great.

Then the extended edition has decent fidelity but some bizarro green-blue color grading.

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[-] eleijeep@piefed.social 10 points 4 days ago
[-] errer@lemmy.world 10 points 4 days ago

Significantly, streaming is 8-16Mbps for 4K, whereas 4K discs are >100

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[-] kabe@lemmy.world 20 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

The thing is, dynamic range compression and audio file compression are two entirely separate things. People often conflate the two by thinking that going from wav or flac to a lossy file format like mp3 or m4a means the track becomes more compressed dynamically, but that's not the case at all. Essentially, an mp3 and a flac version of the same track will have the same dynamic range.

And yes, while audible artifacts can be a thing with very low bitrate lossy compression, once you get to128kbps with a modern lossy codec it becomes pretty much impossible to hear in a blind test. Hell, even 96kbps opus is pretty much audibly perfect for the vast majority of listeners.

[-] oktoberpaard@piefed.social 6 points 4 days ago

In a distant past I liked to compare hires tracks with the normal ones. It turned out that they often used a different master with more dynamic range for the hires release, tricking the listener into thinking it sounded different because of the high bitrate and sampling frequency. The second step was to convert the high resolution track to standard 16 bit 44.1 kHz and do a/b testing to prove my point to friends.

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[-] commander@lemmy.world 14 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Usually when I hear someone swear by lossless audio one service provides compared to another, I swear the reality is either placebo or one service is just using a better masterering of an album compared to another. The service that has on their service the better version album mix and mastering. Like they could serve it as 192kbps MP3 and sound better than a lossless encoded album version with the non ideal mix and mastered release

[-] kabe@lemmy.world 18 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

Oh, 100%. I actually tested this by recording bit perfect copies from different streaming services and comparing them using Audacity.

I found that they only way to hear a difference between the same song played on two different platforms was 1) if there was a notable difference in gain or 2) if they were using two different masters for the same song. If two platforms were using the same master version, they were impossible to tell apart in an ABX test.

All of this is to say that the quality of the mastering is orders of magnitude more important than whether or not a track is lossy or lossless, as far as audible audio quality goes.

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[-] BCsven@lemmy.ca 3 points 3 days ago

I'm a person with sensitive hearing and mp3 always sounds muddy to me compared with a flac or wav rip. My coworker poo-pooed this notion, but I proved it to him. Mp3 does alter the sounds, most people won't notice, but for somebody that does hear the differences its annoying. I would not spend 10k or anything. I paid $15 for an old 5.1 system, and max $80 for a pi2 with a DAC hat. LOL

For me its like if you stood outside a persons house and heard them talking vs their words coming over their TV. There is a noticable signature that let's you hear its the TV or real people, and that's what mp3 vs wav is like for me.

I can also hear my neighbours ceiling fan running in the connected town home. That almost inaudible drone of the motor running, drives me nuts

[-] UnspecificGravity@piefed.social 6 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

I think it depends on your source.

If we are talking about a downloaded good high bit rate MP3 and a FLAC, then yeah, I can't hear a difference.

For streaming, I CAN hear a difference between the default spotify stream and my locally stored lossless files. That difference might come down to how they are mastered or whatever spotify does to the files, but whatever it is the difference is pretty perceptible to me and I don't have especially sensitive ears.

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[-] SoleInvictus@lemmy.blahaj.zone 25 points 4 days ago

I couldn't agree more. I got interest in higher-end audio equipment when I was younger, so I went to a local audio shop to test out some Grado headphones. They had a display of different headphones all hooked up to the "same" audio source.

60x vs 80x sounded identical. 60x to 125x, the latter had a bit more bass. 125x to 325x, the latter had a lot more bass and the clarity was a bit better. Then I plugged the 60x into the same connection they had the 325x in. Suddenly the 60x sounded damn similar. Not quite as good, but the 60x was 1/3 the cost and the 325x sure as hell didn't sound 3x better. They just had the EQ set better for it.

[-] bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works 10 points 4 days ago

Picked up a bose system test cassette once. It sounds amazing at first listen on anything because they overhype the high and low end, much like most bad modern music. And its actually fatiguing over time and stresses people out. Big reason I hate a lot of (popular) modern music is the over hyped non natural eq.

Friends will show me songs and they grind on my ears with that unnautural 3k boost to make everything "radio sounding", gross. I don't want modern radio polish (and the sampled kick drums, awful) I want good sound.

Commodores, night shift, 1985, one of the best sounding albums of all time because they knew what they were doing. And funnily enough one of the first digital tape recordings on a Mitsubishi! Also the nightfly.

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[-] Treczoks@lemmy.world 19 points 4 days ago

I like lossless compression. But not because I'd be a audio nut. I prefer it from a data retention and archival viewpoint. I could cut and join lossless data as often as i like, without losses accumulating.

[-] ranzispa@mander.xyz 3 points 3 days ago

Do you often cut and join audio that you did not record yourself?

[-] Treczoks@lemmy.world 5 points 3 days ago

I would not call it often, but it happens.

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[-] unmagical@lemmy.ml 34 points 4 days ago

I fucking love audio and have an extensive collection of equipment. The last thing in the chain before your ears (so headphones and speakers) will absolutely make a difference and the thing that provides power to that can make a difference. But the cables? The fucking cables?! Absolutely no impact once you're above like $10. Turns out, electrons are electrons and they behave like electrons. Shockingly that doesn't change in copper, gold plated copper, pure silver, or mud. Doubly so for the non analog part of the chain. Hell I've even seen "audiophile grade" ethernet cables.

The other part of the equation is if the differences made by the things that do make a difference actually matter to the listener. They do to me, but my dad is more than happy to just use the speakers on his Dell monitors.

[-] Joncash2@lemmy.ml 25 points 4 days ago

Well, that's not entirely correct. Given a long enough run, attenuation will absolutely cause bad cables to perform poorly. Like your not getting a 10 meter run on bananas. That said, for any modern cable, that run has to be greater than 50 meters for it to even start mattering. So if your wiring up a warehouse, you probably need to care about the type of wire your using.

[-] crank0271@lemmy.world 12 points 4 days ago

Like your not getting a 10 meter run on bananas.

Source? /s

[-] stephen01king@piefed.zip 12 points 4 days ago

I don't think I've ever seen a 10 metre banana.

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[-] OwOarchist@pawb.social 32 points 4 days ago

A lot of it comes down to a mix of snobbishness, sunk cost fallacy, and tribalism.

You can't admit that your $5,000 pair of headphones sound exactly the same as a $300 pair, because:

  • You'd no longer be able to pretend that you're better than the people who have $300 headphones.

  • You'd have to admit to yourself that you completely wasted $4,700.

  • You'd have to realize that the tight-knit community you've formed with other $10k headphone people isn't really bettor or even really distinct from communities of people with $300 headphones.

[-] UnspecificGravity@piefed.social 12 points 4 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago)

I buy headphone cables based on how nice the cable feels, if it transmits noise when it rubs against stuff, and how well the connectors fit into the devices I am using.

My favorite is when people get picky about cabling for digital transfer. The ones and zeroes either get there or they don't, nothing in-between. They work or they don't.

I think the best thing to do is to assess your ability to hear difference. I can absolutely hear the difference between my Bluetooth earbuds and a decent wired IEM, so I use wired headphones for listening to music. I CANNOT hear a significant qualitative difference between the $25 Chinese IEMs that I use and more expensive options that I have tried, so I use the cheap ones.

To be sure, there ARE perceptible differences between wired headphones, but those are more a matter of EQ and personal preference. I can achieve my maximum perceivable level of quality with pretty inexpensive hardware. It doesn't mean that other people cannot, that isn't my problem.

[-] Lorindol@sopuli.xyz 6 points 3 days ago

My favorite is when people get picky about cabling for digital transfer. The ones and zeroes either get there or they don't, nothing in-between. They work or they don't.

Around the time when HDMI was released my friend bought some "super-high-end "cable that cost over 200$, since he wanted the "best possible performance " out of his system. I tried to explain that the cheapest cables would give the exact same results if they're not faulty from the start. We had a loud argument about this, even though the guy is a goddamn tech PhD. He just could not admit he got scammed and tried to give me a lecture about "how the gold plated connectors make all the difference".

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[-] pet1t@lemmy.world 10 points 4 days ago

I'm a musician. I swear by Beyerdynamic DT700. Fucking great headphones for like an insanely reasonable price

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[-] bstix@feddit.dk 1 points 2 days ago

something about audio that attracts an atmosphere of wilful ignorance

I think it's the lack of a shared vocabulary.

Everyone likes some music better than other music, and so everyone think they can tell the difference between good and bad music. However, nobody can explain the difference in plain words.

This easily leads to the conclusion that it is fully subjective, and this is where the ignorance comes from. If nobody can explain what good music is, then my own voodoo explanation is as good as any.

However, we can talk about music theory, audio production and sound analysis in scientific terms to the point where we can even reproduce certain sounds based on the description. But we can't really understand the description without actually experiencing the sound.

It's similar to somebody saying "I don't like this cake" or someone saying "my taste receptors react to the umami in this cake", but I still wouldn't have a clue about how the cake tastes.

Sound is also different from other sciences in that there is very little proof of one thing being more correct than others. And that goal changes constantly. Whenever somebody does crack the code to what people enjoy, it'll get boring really quick.

I had a music teacher long ago who said that there is no bad music, only wrong audiences. His point was that the music that makes it through to the recording and publishing will already have passed the filter where someone made a decision if there is an audience for it. If you hear bad music, then you're just not the right audience.

Anyway, cables. Who cares. The end result is the most important part. However, I'd prefer to hook up the instruments on stage with thick cables instead of bananas. Same thing applies at home. Any wire will do, but cheap wires do break.

[-] prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone 7 points 4 days ago

I think a lot of it is a sort of sunk cost fallacy.

They bought the expensive shit, so they have to believe it's better.

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this post was submitted on 14 Feb 2026
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