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Plaintext
Episode: 805
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Title: HPR0805: How Monster Cable got its name
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0805/hpr0805.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-08 02:48:53
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---
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Hope you enjoyed some of the lovely video and
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have a nice day!
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Thanks for watching!
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Good morning, good afternoon and good evening. This is Mr. Gadget's calling in once again.
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And I guess what we'll talk about here is more audio related things.
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But the real title of this one I suppose will be Monster Cable didn't start out being evil.
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So there's a lot of talk about Monster Cable and whenever it comes up nowadays,
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every time he talks about hallucinations, that Monster Cable gets you know,
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tins or you know, sometimes $100 for the same kind of cable that everybody who knows
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anything about anything, especially in terms of digital cable,
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you can buy a cable that has exactly the same capabilities as the Monster Cable
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that might cost you $30, $40, $50 US, admittedly and ever to $36,
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that's not a money in the world stage.
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But still, quite a bit of money and you can buy the equivalent from monoprise
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or other especially online kinds of sources for five bucks or maybe even less for the equivalent kind of cable.
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Now since most of you probably weren't even born yet,
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when Monster Cable first came into existence,
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and some of the things we're going to talk about here actually have to do with some basic audio kinds of things,
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which may or may not be knowledgeable about.
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So for instance, one of the things back in the day of Hi-Fi, you know,
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Hi-Fidelity and Stereo's and things like that,
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and that's when I went to, you know, university in the Dark Ages and being a music student,
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I was very interested in Hi-Fidelity reproduction of music.
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Yes, this was vinyl spinning discs.
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The long play album was the media of the day,
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and a lot of it was about the turntable,
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and those of us who were more dedicated to this kind of thing,
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didn't even buy integrated receiver that had the tuner and the amplifier together
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because we wanted to be able to replace and ship those things in and out.
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So if you were really dedicated, you would buy a tuner,
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separate, and AMFM, or maybe FM tuner,
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separate from the integrated amplifier.
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That was, you can always replace the amplifier if the better one came along.
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Really dedicated people would have a power amplifier on its own,
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and then a pre-amplifier,
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and one of the more inexpensive of those pre-amplifiers
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that were available at that time,
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was a diner kit,
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and that pre-amplifier was an excellent pre-amplifier,
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and you could build it from a kit,
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and roughly say some money that way,
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and it was a really good pre-amplifier to use with whatever power amplifier you had acquired.
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One of my roommates back in my college days had a public address system,
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and thus we had a really kicking kind of stereo in our apartment,
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because we had his PA speakers that we would use when we,
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one of the music groups I was in,
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we had PA speakers in conjunction with that group, a smaller group,
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and so we called those around to various gigs,
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and he had a crown 300 watt amplifier,
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and then the speakers,
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and they were very efficient speakers.
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Basically, there's two kinds of speakers systems in general.
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There's all kinds of variations on this,
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but there are closed enclosures,
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and there are various types of open or ducted enclosures.
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And in general, the horn speakers,
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which are actually a variation on the open speaker system,
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and the ducted speaker systems were more efficient.
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The same amount of wattage in would get you a larger amount of decimal pressure coming out of the speaker.
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One of the best and the sound that I still love to this day,
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was a speaker system that were an example of the speaker design
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with a duct that would enhance the bass
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and provide part of the noise of that speaker system,
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and the health was,
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and these were actually used, you know, in theater systems,
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and things like that.
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One of them was Altec Lansing,
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was one of the ones that were available in that time frame,
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and there may be something, well, I know there are earbuds nowadays
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that are reportedly from Altec Lansing,
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but, you know, I have no idea if that's really the old Altec Lansing.
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Another one that were ducted speakers
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and were efficient were JBL speakers,
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and a pair of those cost you quite a bit.
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We already talked an previous episode about the whole aspect
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of making your own speaker systems,
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and what my boss at the time,
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and according to you I said about that.
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So, various types of speaker systems that were available,
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and one of them was the Clipsch system.
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Clipsch still does make speakers,
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and as far as I know that is a continuous of the same company,
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and there's a characteristic kind of Clipsch sound
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of the big horn-loaded speakers with Clipsch,
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and I really love that sound.
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It has really good high frequencies,
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and a nice mid-range,
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a little bit of an accentuation.
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If you looked at it on the spectrum analyzer of the middle kind of frequencies,
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not as much bass from Clipsch speakers,
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at least back in this time frame that we're talking about,
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middle 70s and on into the 80s,
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in more analog days, and not as much digital.
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But that was true of most Clipsch systems
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that people had in their homes.
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Now, the larger-sized Clipsch horn-loaded speakers were designed
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to actually fit in a corner,
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and were used, as I said,
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in many movie houses of the day,
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either Alpha Clamping or Clipsch,
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were used in a lot of movie houses back then,
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and I remember going to a guy's apartment over in St. Louis,
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when we were over there on a kind of musical tour kind of trip,
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we were over there to do some performances in St. Louis,
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and there was a friend of a friend kind of
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that I got in contact with to get some electronic parts.
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He apparently worked for,
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I think it was McDonald Douglas,
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and had access to a lot of electronic parts.
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And so, like I said,
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he was a brother of the other person that I knew
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through another friend,
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and we, you know,
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ventured out three GPS,
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found his little house,
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a little classic kind of 1950s ranch-style houses,
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people living in the US know what I mean,
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and we knock on the door,
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and he said,
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from inside I can hear him yelling out and he says,
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wait just a minute,
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and I hear this sound,
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that sounds like he's rolling something over the floor
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or dragging something
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as a sound of a rumbling sound,
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like something zooming across the floor,
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and then he opens up the front door.
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Now, if you're from the United States of America,
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you're familiar with this house.
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It has a big picture window in the living room,
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and you come into the front door on one side
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or the other of that living room,
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which is a large rectangle right here at the front of the house.
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The kitchen is behind that,
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two or three bedrooms,
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off to one side,
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and the garage,
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off of the kitchen.
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And, like I say,
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the door is always in the corner of the bedroom.
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Well, what he had actually been doing is he owned
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two of the five-and-half or six-foot tall,
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Clipchorn-loaded speakers
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that you would typically see
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at a large venue like a movie theater
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or something that needed a lot of sound going out.
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Very efficient,
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but not very practical in the living room,
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but this guy was a bachelor,
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and he had mounted these things on castors,
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and one of these,
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he actually rolled into the corner
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so it blocked his front door.
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Like usually, right,
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he would go in and out of the garage,
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and he would use the entrance that went in and out of his kitchen,
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so he didn't need to go in and out of his front door
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on a regular basis.
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But what this did do is give him perfect stereo reproduction
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and lo and behold,
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just as I imagine,
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he had mounted right in the middle or not mounted,
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but placed right in the middle of his rectangular living room there,
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a sofa that was perfectly positioned
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to listen to the stereo separation of his speaker system.
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So the bachelor's life,
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when you had a better income than a beer college student put it forward,
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anyway,
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and I bought some electronic parts from him and all that kind of stuff,
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but I'll never forget that.
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If you have a six foot clip speaker,
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you know, you just mounted on castors
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and moved around your living room to put it in the corner.
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So those are very, very efficient.
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The given amount of, as I say,
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the given amount of power
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that you delivered to those
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will give you a much higher FBL.
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Now, if worth mentioning,
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I don't know that anybody knows
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any more to listen to speakers,
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but during this time frame,
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you used to go and listen to speakers
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and compare those speakers
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and one thing that we learned
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at this time,
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if you do anything about this,
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was you always want to listen to those speakers
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at the same sound pressure level.
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You do not want to listen to the speakers
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where there's a marked difference
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in the amount of sound coming out of the speaker
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because the one that sounds louder
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will inherently sound better to you.
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And thusly, if it was a store
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that was doing this correctly,
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as I mentioned,
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some of these were more efficient
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and some were less efficient,
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and so they would have,
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in their speaker switch,
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a system that would equalize
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the amount of sound coming out of the speaker,
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so you could compare those more directly
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and not have one be a whole lot louder
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than the other one,
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which would then influence you by that speaker.
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And you could always tell
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that the place was trying to kind of,
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you know, take advantage of people
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who were buying things
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because they didn't have that setup
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and certain things with some louder
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and lo and behold,
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that would probably be the one
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that they made the big markup on,
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you know, if you know what I mean.
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Anyway,
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so now here's a little question here,
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okay?
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There you have a, you know,
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I talk about sound pressure levels
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and those are measured in decibels, right?
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Which are tens of the bell.
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Bell being the Alexander bell
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of telephone things.
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And the decibel
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is a logarithmic kind of system.
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So every ten decibels,
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right, essentially one decibel
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is the minimum
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that one can hear a difference in sound.
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And the wattage
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that is required to take place
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and the decibels that you hear
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out of the system
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that is necessary to take place
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are all related to what another,
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how efficient the system is,
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depending upon the wattage
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of the, you know,
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the amplifier driving the speaker system.
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But it's related to this logarithmic scale
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for the decibel.
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Now, as I mentioned,
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the one decibel is being
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does the minimum
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that, you know,
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one can hear a difference in sound
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at whatever level.
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And in order to provide
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a difference in sound
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that sounds twice as loud
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does not require you
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to just double the decibels.
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In fact,
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to double the perceived amount of sound
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out of the system,
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you need ten times
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power
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for something along that line.
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And so,
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the amount of power that you need
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from your amplifier
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to be louder
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and not be distorted
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would grow, as I said,
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logarithmically.
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You could have a one watt amplifier
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and you could
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build your own one watt amplifier
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that was a transistor based.
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And it could be a fairly clean amplifier
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with a low distortion
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for the sound and all that type of thing.
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And use that amplifier
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with any speaker system that you wish.
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But if you were using a ported system,
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that was more efficient,
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then you got more decibels out
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for the equivalent amount of wattage.
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And in order to make that seem twice as loud,
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you needed to have ten watts of power.
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And then twice as loud as that,
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a hundred watts of power.
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And then you needed a thousand watts of power.
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And so, it goes up,
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I said exponentially,
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logarithmically here.
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And so, efficiency of the speakers
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was very important.
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And to this day,
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your analog line,
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your speaker line,
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that goes from your amplifier,
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your stereo amplifier
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to the speakers,
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that's usually not a digital signal, right?
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That is usually still analog,
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going from the amplifier to the speakers.
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Now,
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where this goes back to monster cable,
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not starting up being able,
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is there's actually a spec
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that takes place
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with speaker wire
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and the frequencies involved with sound reproduction.
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When you get into radio waves,
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this is much more profound.
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And in fact, there's
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an impedance that gives associated with
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the wire that transfers
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your radio signal to your tower.
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And in fact,
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there's also a effect
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of how much that wire
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is going to
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diminish the sound,
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how much that
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of the signal you're going to lose
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when you are transferring
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a radio signal,
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because your transmitter
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is at the bottom of the tower,
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and you've got a long wire
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going to your top of the radio tower
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because you want that.
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And can it very high in the air
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in order to get the best signal out?
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And that actually
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is a relationship to
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what the frequency is
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that you're actually
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broadcasting on.
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You want a certain
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length of
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minimum length
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above the ground.
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And the impedance
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of the wire itself
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is very important.
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There's coaxial wire
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like you might see
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with a citizen fan radio
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or various center types of two-way radios.
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There's also
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what the radio guys would call
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a ladder line,
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which is literally two
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strands of wire
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separated
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and
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coaxial
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low,
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evenly
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along the entire length of the wire,
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and the reason
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it's called ladder line
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is because they're
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inflators that hold a
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part,
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and it looks like
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a little miniature ladder.
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And even that has
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an impedance.
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Typically coaxial
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cable is 300
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ohms.
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The coaxial cable you might
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use to connect
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your T receiver
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to an antenna,
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which is typically
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75 ohms.
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And then
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the various ladder lines
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are either
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300 or 600 ohms.
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And there is
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a attenuation
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of the signal,
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any of the coaxes
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that are more
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resistant to
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outside influence
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of
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magnetism and
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electromagnetic
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forces like
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hum and other
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kinds of things
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that degrade your radio signal.
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Well,
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the ladder line
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is a very resistant at all
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with the two
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inflators,
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but it has the
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least loss.
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And then
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any of the coaxial
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which
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are more resistant
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to that,
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you lose
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part of your signal
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and since we're talking
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maybe hundreds of
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teeth up to the top
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of your tower,
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this is an important aspect.
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So you want to
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get the best balance
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of not losing
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your signal,
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but
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and maximizing
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not a power
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that you're delivering
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to the antenna.
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And antenna is
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a very similar
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to speakers
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that we have
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four
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ohms or
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eight ohms are
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the typical
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kind of thing.
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Typical
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speakers eight ohms
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and four ohm
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or eight ohm
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loads are
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typically what
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amplifiers are
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rated
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to deliver to.
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And it's not like
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you lose a whole lot of
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power in your
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distribution line
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to the speaker.
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And the
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frequencies are low enough
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that you don't have to
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worry about how to get the
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ladder line where
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they're
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even spaces apart.
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But if
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it is still an
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area
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that is
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dangerous for you to
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use.
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There is some
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degradation of that power.
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You're not
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delivering
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much power to the
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speaker.
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And part of that is
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something that
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is called
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the skin effect.
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Well,
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if you look
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at what you
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see skin effect in
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what you see
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is the surface
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effect of a skin
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effect.
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And what it's actually refers to is depending on the conductor, but typically with speaker
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where we're talking, you know, copper conductor, right?
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And now it's worth mentioning when I talk about speaker wire, I'm not talking about specialized
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connectors that one uses in modern public address system.
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So if you set up for a band, if you're a roadie, there's literally a speaker connector.
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It's kind of like an XLR connector with three, you know, contacts on it, and it you
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plug it in and you rotate it to lock it into the speaker system.
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And that liberal connector and the female that it walks into is called a speaker connector.
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But I'm not talking about that.
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I'm talking about the regular speaker wire that goes, you know, just the wire that transfers
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from your amplifier to your speakers.
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And this is true for stereos and this is true for your 5.1, you know, stereo system when you're
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for satellite speakers around the room and your bass speaker, right, for your subwoofer here.
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So that wire, the skin effect is related to the frequency and the higher the frequency,
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the less actual area of the cross-diagonal of the wire is used to transfer the electrons,
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right?
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The current going through the wire is electrons passing from atoms to atoms and copper is very good
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about that.
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If it's not very easy for those atoms to go from place to place.
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For low frequencies, it'll use that transfer of the electrons will happen very deep into the wire.
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So if you were to look at that cross-section of the wire, you would, and you were to be able
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to measure that in their ways to do this, the electrons will be transferring in atoms that are
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quite down deep beyond just the surface.
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But the higher your frequencies go, the less and the less of the atoms are involved with the
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transfer of the electrons, okay, it's called the skin effect because it's closer to the skin,
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closer to the outside.
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And in that particular regard, a lot of people at the time would use just a standard
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zip cord that's called, it's got two conductors, and it's called zip cord that has you can pull
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in the part and plastic or rubber kinds of, you know, of insulator around, and it does hold the
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wire's parallel, but that's not really important here, right, at these frequencies.
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But you can just zip it apart, it comes apart kind of like a zipper, right?
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And then you can separate the wires and then, you know, cut off the insulators and twist
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them around and poke them into your conductors or your fingers, okay, and typically the
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cheapest stuff like that that you can buy was a solid cord, it was one wire inside of there.
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Now some people had already started using the stranded wire, right, multiple, you know,
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little strands of wire twisted together because the problem with the solid core wire at whatever
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gauge was the fact that it was too easy to bend it too often and it would break even inside
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the inflator.
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So sometimes you do stranded cord, but typically a lot of stereos, and to this day I see a lot of
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stereos or multi-channel, you know, kind of set up to have very thin wire that is going to that
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and partially that's too high to wire, right, because there's spread around your house,
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there's spread around your roof.
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But the stranded aspect of things use your work conductors and each of the individual
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conductors has a fun skin effect.
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So you're losing less power with the same gauge wire, if it's a bunch of little wires that are
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stranded and are, you know, together as opposed to just the one single wire and by going to
|
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larger finds of wire, which gauge of wire is kind of funny because it's similar to gauge of
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shotgun cells, right, so an 18 gauge wire is thinner than a 16 gauge wire, which is thusly thinner
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than a 14 gauge wire.
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So the lower the number, the thicker of the wire, okay, and so a lot of people would use
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18 gauge wire, and that's what it looks like a lot of these five, one, you know, movie times
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of things use is probably about 18 gauge wire, and you've got a certain number of strands
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that made up that 18 gauge total that was the size of the wire.
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Well, people started using 16, there was even 22 gauge wire, you get little teeny tiny wires,
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and it's just little teeny tiny stranded versions of them.
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Well, stop using 22 gauge and use 18 gauge instead, and for some reason there's not
|
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much 20 gauge wire around, right? But stop using 22 gauge and use 18 gauge, and all of a sudden
|
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you've got more strands of wire, and thusly you have less skin effect and you lose less power
|
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between your amplifier and your speakers, right? And sometimes we're talking about very small
|
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lottings of amplifiers here, but it's still true to the say, you're, you know, 200 watt
|
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amplifier, it's not delivery, it's maximum 200 watts, if you're using little skinny wires,
|
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as opposed to thicker wires, that have more strands of wire, and thusly have the skin effect
|
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spread out across multiple wires, and more power is delivered to your speakers.
|
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And thusly the monster cable, and I'm doing your quotes here, was more. It was literally a
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monster cable, it was a big, a cable that had a whole good trillion stranded wires,
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that would then go down to a, you know, a point that was small, not to fit into the little,
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you know, push the clip and stick the wire in that you would have on the, the stereo side,
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and the amplifier side, and the speaker side. And that's, thusly monster cables were born.
|
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Now, it being that I was in college, I couldn't even afford the monster cables, you know,
|
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back then, and this was $19.50 compared to, you know, present-day dollars, and no matter what
|
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somebody tells you about inflation, not me around. Yeah, there's been a lot of, of inflation,
|
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and thusly, the same amount of money now is not the same as that, the equivalent amount of money was in,
|
|
you know, the 70s and 80s. But I couldn't afford the monster cable, but I came across a cable that
|
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was actually used for some digital transfer and data, and I came across it cheaply enough,
|
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that I just took that, and it was a venture-stranded wire, and it was multiple pairs of stranded
|
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wire. And so I created my own monster cables, right? I stripped off the wire and then twisted them
|
|
together to form my, you know, two connectors that I needed to provide a better transference of the
|
|
power from the amplifier to the speakers. And this was actually measurable when you talked about,
|
|
you know, some of these things. I mean, you could actually measure the difference of the sound pressure
|
|
level you would get out, and it was more important if you were using closed speakers because
|
|
they were less efficient, and we're talking about smaller scale amplifiers. Now, what did we learn
|
|
from this, right? When it comes time to talk about other types of cables, I guess monster could
|
|
kind of make some claim for other types of cables that were analog, but when we move into the
|
|
digital age, there's no need for a monster cable, right? There's no appreciable difference between
|
|
the overrised monster cable and the equivalent four or five dollar cable you can buy off of various
|
|
sites on the internet. It's a digital signal. It's ones and zeros. You don't have to worry about the
|
|
signal degrading over time and less and less analog, you know, voltage swing because all the
|
|
voltage swing has to do on any given line of the digital cable is be of about a certain voltage
|
|
and be below a certain voltage, and then you've got a cutoff voltage that means the one or a zero
|
|
and you're done. So, obviously, there's no real reason why you should pay extra for that,
|
|
but their entire company was based upon this. Hard cables are better than any other cable that
|
|
you can use from the very beginning, and they literally haven't figured out a way to have any
|
|
other advantage. Gold connectors kind of get into this, but that's a whole data subject, and there's
|
|
a whole lot of things that have little connectors, okay? That's better because they don't oxidize,
|
|
and, you know, the connection doesn't, you know, reduce any transference of the electrical
|
|
signal and all those kinds of things, and that, you know, but there's a lot of cables that have that.
|
|
So, they started out with a dim and straightable advantage that justified a higher price,
|
|
but when they moved on to other things, they never came up with other reasons why their cables
|
|
were better, and there really isn't much of a reason why their cables are better,
|
|
but people don't know the difference, and thusly, well, this must be better because it, you know,
|
|
costs more. But they didn't start out being evil. It's just that they're stuck in this rut. We
|
|
make cables, and our cables are better than everybody else, and it ends up being there isn't any,
|
|
especially for digital ones. There isn't any way to prove that they're better than anybody else.
|
|
That's the only thing they have that is a small one. Now, what do we learn from this, as I said?
|
|
One thing we learn is, when things change, you either need to adapt, or eventually somebody's
|
|
going to see through and figure out that the emperor has no clothes on, right? If you're a
|
|
buggy manufacturer, you better start figuring out what you can manufacture with the same tool and
|
|
that doesn't involve a horse drawing at any more, right? You better get into this auto-mobile
|
|
kind of manufacturing of auto-mobile chassis, or you're going to be out of business soon, right?
|
|
If you're a stable boy, and your father was a stable boy, and your grandfather was a stable boy,
|
|
and it gets to be the early 1900s, you better find another way to make a living, because you
|
|
aren't going to be a stable boy for that much longer, because the stables aren't going to be
|
|
necessary for that much longer, because horses are going away, and cars are coming in.
|
|
And what do we learn about this for other companies, okay? One that I can think of is Microsoft.
|
|
Now, Microsoft is built upon the fact that they came up with an operating system to actually win
|
|
out and bought an operating system from another company there in Seattle, so that they could say to
|
|
IBM when they came up to them and asked about an operating system for the new PC, which the PC,
|
|
you know, had its birthday just last week when I'm recording this, and they said, yeah, we've
|
|
done an operating system for that, and they rushed around and bought this operating system that
|
|
became the operating system that every PC had with it, and then they came out with windows,
|
|
once the graphical things started becoming popular that kind of sat on top of windows,
|
|
and it's been included with your computer all the way along. It's hard to buy a computer without
|
|
the operating system that comes from Redmond, Washington, right? It's just the natural thing.
|
|
You buy a PC, they come up with that operating system. But I do believe we really are getting
|
|
into a quote unquote post PC world. There's going to be more and more devices that do not run windows,
|
|
at least the windows that we think of traditionally, on the desktop. There's going to be more and more
|
|
devices that run other kind of operating systems. Now, Redmond would love that to be mobile windows,
|
|
but a lot of those devices like the phone that is, you know, in your pocket or in your bag,
|
|
and tablets that are coming out, and the set of laptops that you have will those aren't running
|
|
a windows based operating system, and Microsoft doesn't get a little bit of every single one of those devices.
|
|
I've long said that in Bill Gates' perfect world, right, everything you own without a Microsoft
|
|
operating system on it, and they get a little chunk of change, right? For every single thing you buy,
|
|
everything should be a Microsoft operating system. But that's not how it's turned out to be.
|
|
We got a lot of things that are running Linux, and other kinds of Xs, right? You know, WebOS is kind
|
|
of based on a unit kind of variant. We got Linux, a very install out there. Androi has really kind
|
|
of soloco, running on top of a Linux kernel. Even the black version, if it manages to survive,
|
|
is a, you know, a unique kind of variant, right? Unix compatible kind of operating system,
|
|
that's a real time operating system, but you can type Unix stock advance if you get to a terminal
|
|
in there. And the world is a change in, and what is that going to mean to the Microsoft?
|
|
Are they going to react to that and change? Or are they going to just keep on doing what they've
|
|
always done, and the world's going to pass them by? And you know, it seems like that couldn't
|
|
possibly be, but I got another story to tell you. When I did this, I traveled in the 80s for the
|
|
small computer company that I, the computer software company that I worked for, and they got
|
|
bought out by the database company from California. I was on a trip to Boston, and this is the
|
|
high life in Boston. This is back in the days when the, the housing in the Boston area, at
|
|
least, was really going up, up, up. I mean, the reason why Bob Vila and this old house
|
|
had so many old houses that you could redo and get alone to be able to do, you know, upgrades
|
|
on that house is because if you just waited a couple of years, your house was worth that much
|
|
more and you could get alone against it, right, and do improvements on your house.
|
|
And I remember reading a story about that, and also then, in that same newspaper,
|
|
I read another story and it was talking about Novel. Not this time, in the 80s, Novel owned
|
|
networking. Novel was networking. Microsoft usually, like I say, they buy their way into a market,
|
|
they don't write it themselves. Okay, they did continue to develop, you know, DOS, and they
|
|
developed Windows internally. The lots of other things they bought that. And Microsoft tried to
|
|
break Novel's stranglehold on networking. Three times, as I remember, it was finally the third
|
|
one that started making the inroads. But at this time, Novel was networking, right? There
|
|
was Banyan and a couple of other, you know, minor kinds of things. So basically, if you were talking
|
|
about micro computers, you were a Novel shop for your networking. And at this particular time,
|
|
in this newspaper story, I noticed that the person said that there were more resellers of
|
|
Novel software. Now, not certified professionals or, you know, people who couldn't support other
|
|
things, but just people who sold Novel software. There were more resellers of Novel software.
|
|
Then there were Southland Industries locations in the United States of America. And I don't know
|
|
who owns them now, but at this particular time, Southland Industries, I think I if posted that,
|
|
if I'm not exactly right on that. Basically, what Southland Industries was known for was they own
|
|
7-Eleven stores. So there were more resellers of Novel in the United States of America,
|
|
in the middle eighties here. Then there were 7-Eleven convenience stores in the United States of America.
|
|
And yet, where is Novel today? Basically, they don't exist anymore, do they?
|
|
And ironically, part of what was Novel has been bought out by Microsoft.
|
|
So what you think of now as the great ones, there are other things that in the middle eighties,
|
|
people would laugh at you. They would scoff at you when you suggested that it was possible that Novel
|
|
would no longer own the networking market. And yet, it happened because they let Microsoft chip away
|
|
and chip away and finally come up with something that could compete with them and they didn't innovate
|
|
to stay ahead and they're gone. And it's the same way with Monster. Monster is eventually going to
|
|
be gone because eventually people are going to see through this. It's not really that much different
|
|
than going to a big box store. If you go to any retailer and you buy a cable there,
|
|
it's going to cost you not as much as a monster cable. It must, of course, it is a monster cable.
|
|
But it's not going to be as cheap as you can buy an equivalent cable that electrically will accomplish
|
|
exactly the same task online. So you have to think about this and you have to innovate
|
|
and you have to progress. You can't rest on your laurels and if there's anything anywhere
|
|
that's more true, it's in the technological world here. Now the other thing that we've learned about
|
|
this is there is a loss of that. And so this is a why is it we're still doing this? Okay. So
|
|
example of why is it we're still doing this is why do we build houses, at least in the US,
|
|
and I'm assuming this way at a lot of places still? Why do we still build houses, the way we did
|
|
to build houses 100 years ago? We bring a bunch of lumber to a location and we build it by cutting
|
|
the lumber up into pieces and nailing it and screwing it and various other fasteners together to build
|
|
the house. It's like saying you bought a new car and they deliver a bunch of pieces and parts
|
|
to your driveway and they build the car in your driveway. Okay. So why are we delivering the sound
|
|
to the speakers? The same way we've been delivering sound to speakers ever since they
|
|
invented amplifiers. There are certain power speakers that I know are available and a lot of
|
|
people use in studios for their home recording studios and things like that. Why aren't there more
|
|
because I can build a nice amplifier with a good amount of wattage and with this whole
|
|
way that the decibels work, you know, you can get a good amount of nice clean sound especially
|
|
with some of the new designs of amplifiers that are available now in a very small space with very
|
|
small amounts of power and you don't need 200 watts of power, right? Because really 200
|
|
watts of power is just, you know, somewhat louder than 20 watts. If you had a more efficient speaker
|
|
and if you had a nice clean high-power amplifier directly on the speaker and we delivered a
|
|
digital cable signal to that amplifier and then had a digital analog converter or even if we
|
|
delivered an analog signal to that power amplifier but your centralized system looked more of a pre-amplifier
|
|
that you don't have to worry about this kind of thing at line levels, right? At line levels that come
|
|
out of the amplifier, you could deliver that analog signal even over there without losing much
|
|
and then you could amplify it at the speaker and deliver it more efficiently that way.
|
|
I don't really see more of that. Why don't we see some innovation in these things? Because a lot
|
|
of things having to do with sound have radically changed, right? Nobody uses LPs anymore unless they're
|
|
way into sound and like the sound of LPs and are basically way the exception rather than the rules,
|
|
right? It's a real kind of nerdy specialist geeky thing to be into LPs.
|
|
And we totally, totally rearranged how we deliver the sound out there in terms of the medium
|
|
but that medium then goes into an analog signal and gets delivered to the speakers basically exactly
|
|
the same way it did in the 1950s and 1940s when the basics of, you know, those kinds of amplifiers
|
|
came into their peak of development. The only difference between that and now is we went from tubes
|
|
which I'd also like to say, real electronics glow. And I would love to have the money to own
|
|
a really nice crown tube amplifier or, you know, a Macintosh which is the ultimate, and this is not
|
|
the computer, this is the stereo equipment, a Macintosh amp with real tubes that glow but that's not
|
|
as clean and amplifier. It affects the sound, okay? If not as clean as some of these new,
|
|
you know, designs that are available at all of the state amplifiers but we still have them
|
|
centralized and we still have little teeny tiny thin wires delivering it out through the speakers
|
|
and that's not a profession. So we fixed that by just up in the amplifier of the wattage
|
|
but that's really not an equivalent kind of thing. I mean, I could use less wattage, I could
|
|
be more efficient, I could use less power if I had more efficient speakers and if I outsource,
|
|
if I move those amplifiers out to the speaker systems rather than centrally. A lot of large-scale
|
|
PA's that I saw coming in in concert venues, a lot of those are that way. The amplifier is in
|
|
the PA speaker and it delivers a line-level signal of what that speaker's supposed to be reproducing
|
|
and the speaker has power and if the amplifier and the speaker all integrate it together
|
|
but not in the home, at least not that much. Powered subwoofers are the only time when you see
|
|
typically a powered speaker, not anything above those base speaker frequencies. Why not?
|
|
Here's an opportunity there. There's always an opportunity and are you going to be the one
|
|
who sees that opportunity and does something to make something do something in this particular
|
|
regard because if you do, you can have then that capability of making a lot of money. Maybe you
|
|
win as much money as Bill Gates, right? So you can have a lot there and this is Mr. Gadget. It's
|
|
hoping to see you. I found out I'm going to be at the Ohio Linux SESC. So let's see if the
|
|
Ohio Linux SESC, which by the time this comes out, it will be closer to that.
|
|
And if not, be careful and I'll be out here on a technological frontier and you know
|
|
so we'll talk about it next time. But be careful and we'll talk to you later. Bye now.
|
|
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